Oh God at last someone who’s seeing what I’m seeing!Just_a_fan wrote: ↑05 Aug 2023, 16:20Project One predates the cost cap and isn't of an aero type relevant to the current F1 rule set. Mercedes also lost a good number of personnel to other teams, such as Red Bull. You might remember Horner crowing about it at the time. "Poaching" I think he called it.Willy wrote: ↑05 Aug 2023, 15:04It applies to all three teams. Red Bull, Ferrari and Mercedes. The headache must have been higher for Mercedes as they had the highest spending, followed by Ferrari and then Red Bull, previous to cost cap regulations. Neither of them did mass layoffs, so that makes me wonder how they managed the situation.
I am sure each of them found respective loop holes that they have exploited to retain resources like for RB17, Mercedes Project One etc.
Ferrari entered LMP - great way to find work for staff. And being as LMP is a particular rule set that doesn't really interact with F1's rule set, it's less likely to be able to use ideas across the two.
RB17 is a track-day special that doesn't have to abide by any rules other than decibel levels. So they can do whatever they want with it in terms of aero.
So which one is the most likely to be useful as a side-hustle to cheat the resource limitations? The latter one, that's which.
I’ve been saying this exact thing for months and all I got was comments deleted! Probably Red Bull fans can’t accept the possibility of their favorite team finding a loophole…
Newey designed the Valkyrie some years ago! The Valkyrie was a project back when Aston Martin was sponsoring Red Bull in 2018-2020 iirc! So Newey designs his ultimate car, they build it and it goes on sale!
Why would the same guy design this same car again just when the 2022 rules are about to kick in? The only thing I would find plausible is because they want the Red Bull badge on it instead of the Aston Martin one!
Curiously Red Bull ends up with a floor concept way more developed than others and no porpoising as if they had been designing this car for years! More curiously Red Bull were in the midst of a championship battle in 2021 bringing upgrades right to the very last race!
How is it possible for a team under budget cap rules to have so many resources to develop 2 cars (2021,2022) simultaneously, develop a floor way more developed than anyone else on the grid and solve problems like porpoising instantly? Their only problem being weight in 2022…
Newey being the genius because he was building ground effect Indycars in the 80s isn’t an answer since these cars are way too different to be able to implement tricks from back then…
Anyway this is just speculation! If the FIA doesn’t find anything it’s all done and dusted with this argument…though I find it hard for the FIA to find any evidence now!