Merc reign in WDC only came to an end during the final year of technical regulation in 2021, when RBR took the gamble to continue pushing their 2021 car development till the end while compromising their 2022 program. At the moment, RBR is miles ahead in the current technical regulation, and RB20 will be their 3rd evolution since championship-winning RB18, so it is unlikely RBR is going to trip over with their RB20 next year.mendis wrote: ↑08 Nov 2023, 09:32All the challengers have got just one more shot at catching Red Bull and that's 2024. With budget restrictions and limited wind tunnel/CFD times, teams are forced to focus on 2026 car for the whole of 2025. So whatever they make in 2024, is the thing that runs in 2025. Nobody can afford to lose time in 2025, developing 2025 car. So if Red Bull comes out with RB20, retaining same advantage that they now have over the competition, then F1 is stuck with RB leading championship in 2024 and 25.
I think Mercedes domination ended as they fluffed the 2021 changes and lost out more than others. The almighty W11 was the greatest car any team in F1 ever built and it's successor W12 was nowhere near that mark.CHT wrote: ↑08 Nov 2023, 11:23Merc reign in WDC only came to an end during the final year of technical regulation in 2021, when RBR took the gamble to continue pushing their 2021 car development till the end while compromising their 2022 program. At the moment, RBR is miles ahead in the current technical regulation, and RB20 will be their 3rd evolution since championship-winning RB18, so it is unlikely RBR is going to trip over with their RB20 next year.mendis wrote: ↑08 Nov 2023, 09:32All the challengers have got just one more shot at catching Red Bull and that's 2024. With budget restrictions and limited wind tunnel/CFD times, teams are forced to focus on 2026 car for the whole of 2025. So whatever they make in 2024, is the thing that runs in 2025. Nobody can afford to lose time in 2025, developing 2025 car. So if Red Bull comes out with RB20, retaining same advantage that they now have over the competition, then F1 is stuck with RB leading championship in 2024 and 25.
2024 is going to be a tough year for RBR's rival, the mid-field to be extremely close and we can expect drivers taking points off each other while trying to catch Max and RBR.
The team's direction for 2025 will depend on how close the teams are to the RB20 in 2024. If the gap is still as wide as today, I reckon most teams will write off 2025 to focus on 2026.
For sure RBR knows they have the upper hand and they are not going to play nice or play fair to lose this advantage for 2026.
This is what I call the art of deception. From what Eddie Jordon wrote recently he thinks RBR is way ahead with their RB20.mendis wrote: ↑08 Nov 2023, 11:43I think Mercedes domination ended as they fluffed the 2021 changes and lost out more than others. The almighty W11 was the greatest car any team in F1 ever built and it's successor W12 was nowhere near that mark.CHT wrote: ↑08 Nov 2023, 11:23Merc reign in WDC only came to an end during the final year of technical regulation in 2021, when RBR took the gamble to continue pushing their 2021 car development till the end while compromising their 2022 program. At the moment, RBR is miles ahead in the current technical regulation, and RB20 will be their 3rd evolution since championship-winning RB18, so it is unlikely RBR is going to trip over with their RB20 next year.mendis wrote: ↑08 Nov 2023, 09:32All the challengers have got just one more shot at catching Red Bull and that's 2024. With budget restrictions and limited wind tunnel/CFD times, teams are forced to focus on 2026 car for the whole of 2025. So whatever they make in 2024, is the thing that runs in 2025. Nobody can afford to lose time in 2025, developing 2025 car. So if Red Bull comes out with RB20, retaining same advantage that they now have over the competition, then F1 is stuck with RB leading championship in 2024 and 25.
2024 is going to be a tough year for RBR's rival, the mid-field to be extremely close and we can expect drivers taking points off each other while trying to catch Max and RBR.
The team's direction for 2025 will depend on how close the teams are to the RB20 in 2024. If the gap is still as wide as today, I reckon most teams will write off 2025 to focus on 2026.
For sure RBR knows they have the upper hand and they are not going to play nice or play fair to lose this advantage for 2026.
The fact that RB19 has such a leg up on the competition, which the team admits hasn't put a whole lot of effort in their attempt to focus on RB20 due the wind tunnel penalty, if they achieve their objectives for RB20, then 24 and 25 are forgone conclusion. There are no regulatory changes for 24 or 25.
I am curious why would you say so. Here is what I think. Usually, in times when PU development is still allowed, a constructor can dictate a lot of structural needs for the PU that can help the aero and the chassis. Which is not something revealed to customer teams until very last moment, other than just the overall dimensions and general cooling needs. But in times when the PU is frozen and customers know exactly what the cooling needs are, it's not such a big advantage for constructor.
Sieper wrote: ↑08 Nov 2023, 15:41You are certainly right that for 2026 a constructor has much more advantage, but even over these last frozen years the PU (amenities) do change. It is also not just the PU that Mercedes builds, they also make the transmission housing and internals, to their needs.
But I also think the can make big changes (driver further back) suspension set-up that others already have, so there simply is more to gain. It will also come with challenges ofcourse.
Teams are NOT required to buy transmissions, McLaren do not. Honda do not even make a transmission. The block sizes are regulated. Also, if a team buy's it's transmission, they're not obliged to buy the current year. SAT have often used RBR's previous year's transmissions. There isn't any performance gain using the next year's TM, it's often just a packaging change.Sieper wrote: ↑08 Nov 2023, 15:41You are certainly right that for 2026 a constructor has much more advantage, but even over these last frozen years the PU (amenities) do change. It is also not just the PU that Mercedes builds, they also make the transmission housing and internals, to their needs.
But I also think the can make big changes (driver further back) suspension set-up that others already have, so there simply is more to gain. It will also come with challenges ofcourse.
I actually think this will benefit RBR more than their rival as one extra year will give RBR more time to develop their PU and restrict teams like Merc from upgrading their PU.
"somewhere"?