Transfer of team personnel happens constantly. What is now of interest is that AM suddenly has become a good place to head hunt from.
Good. That means, they can recruit few more RB or Merc guys
I’m not worried either.. those names are pre-Dan/Eric era.. who have been replaced already by the new team headed by them. Completely normal.. but does mean they can also hire more staff if needed
better late than never.
Well they're using the higher df wing with a trimmed flap at the moment even for low downforce tracks, so it's safe to assume they will see a good efficiency benefit from the lower df spec. Otherwise teams wouldn't spend on 3-4 RW specs which obviously cost a fair bit.
This is a **** stirring tweetabhi1200 wrote: ↑29 Mar 2023, 04:30Adrain newey looking and staring at aston martin car. https://twitter.com/startonpole/status ... dG5aw&s=19
It is a known fact that the thing is a must have British F1 journalist specialty and that they compete about it between themselves exactly like Qualifying is done in F1.AR3-GP wrote: ↑29 Mar 2023, 05:12This is a **** stirring tweetabhi1200 wrote: ↑29 Mar 2023, 04:30Adrain newey looking and staring at aston martin car. https://twitter.com/startonpole/status ... dG5aw&s=19
Unfortunately much worse in more recent reporting. Always present in the "gutter" press, honed over many years in football reporting, but sadly now invasive in motorsport.saviour stivala wrote: ↑29 Mar 2023, 07:05It is a known fact that the thing is a must have British F1 journalist specialty and that they compete about it between themselves exactly like Qualifying is done in F1.AR3-GP wrote: ↑29 Mar 2023, 05:12This is a **** stirring tweetabhi1200 wrote: ↑29 Mar 2023, 04:30Adrain newey looking and staring at aston martin car. https://twitter.com/startonpole/status ... dG5aw&s=19
I don't think there's typically a lot of degradation for power units as mileage is put into them. Merc suffered with this in '21 as a relic of their extremely aggressive push for peak power in trying to match Ferrari into 2020 and their engine modes/general car advantage being able to mask / prevent the degradation.zoroastar wrote: ↑29 Mar 2023, 21:31how often do the teams break out new engines in the races that they stand to gain more points in? and put the old engine back in later? i was curious if alonso would possibly do that in melbourne after strolls problems last race. seems like it would make sense, but i dont hear about it a ton.
yeah that makes sense i guess. more worried about a break down than a power disadvantage, but thats kinda how the ball rolls sometimes. hopefully strolls problem was a one off.organic wrote: ↑29 Mar 2023, 21:38I don't think there's typically a lot of degradation for power units as mileage is put into them. Merc suffered with this in '21 as a relic of their extremely aggressive push for peak power in trying to match Ferrari into 2020 and their engine modes/general car advantage being able to mask / prevent the degradation.zoroastar wrote: ↑29 Mar 2023, 21:31how often do the teams break out new engines in the races that they stand to gain more points in? and put the old engine back in later? i was curious if alonso would possibly do that in melbourne after strolls problems last race. seems like it would make sense, but i dont hear about it a ton.
And I suspect that if they were to prioritize the usage of engines in this way, rather than saving the fresh/strongest engines for races where they think they'll do better, they'd generally rather save them for circuits where engine performance has a greater effect on laptime such as Monza, spa etc