KimiRai wrote: ↑07 Feb 2024, 00:30
scuderiabrandon wrote: ↑07 Feb 2024, 00:01
KimiRai wrote: ↑07 Feb 2024, 00:00
He's been decent with Ferrari this year so far
one good deed does not erase a lifetime of wickedness
Just so I wash my hands of this here's the quote I'm referencing. His credibility will be tested then, I will certainly keep it in mind
The new Mercedes, therefore, will have the advantage of redistributing the masses and will offer a more compact rear end, without revolutions, because the suspension will maintain the pull rod scheme without copying the push rod concepts of Red Bull: the shorter gearbox will move further back the engine and, therefore, the passenger compartment, by moving the radiator outlets away from the front wheel.
https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-me ... /10562819/
From
https://formu1a.uno/la-nuova-haas-vf-24 ... ari-sf-24/
only Ferrari , and clearly Haas, has opted for the pull-rod suspension while all the other teams will use a strut type (push-rod ).
To go along with Williams refusing to clarify whether pullrod rear would remain and Nunges. Seems likely. Not long to wait I guess.
At this point we should come to terms with Nunges having had good info this time
KimiRai wrote: ↑12 Feb 2024, 05:07
Rumours say not as big a leap as last year, Red Bull is still projected to be far away but the aim is to recover 3 tenths on McLaren and stay near Mercedes and Ferrari. The team is happy with the progress but it would be an evolution and not a revolution.
Seems like a very specific rumour
Recovering compared to McLaren 3 tenths is impressive considering how much they seem confident with their own development. I would imagine that this projection implies that both Ferrari and Merc have also gained relative to McLaren therefore?