No worries.
I agree that "find time" and "find the time" is a very important difference.
We shall see how testing goes.
The cynic would say that without Newey, Red Bull don't have any ideas on what to do (at least in terms of large changes; obviously refining actual problem areas is a different thing) -- this is worrying for the 2026 car if true, but surely is not the case?pantherxxx wrote: ↑25 Feb 2025, 18:36https://thesportsrush.com/f1-news-red-b ... ive-title/
Pierre Wache's comments suggest that Red Bull's primary focus for the RB21 is on developments beneath the surface, particularly in areas like the floor, which is crucial for ground effect performance. The visible changes to the sidepods and engine cover are expected to be subtle, almost unnoticeable, reinforcing the idea that most of the upgrades will be in less obvious but highly influential aerodynamic areas.
In this reg cycle every top team has made a new chassis design each year. The rb21 is almost certainly a new chassis constituting a new designationcontinuum16 wrote: ↑26 Feb 2025, 00:35We know that in the past (not for a long time, but still) teams have run the previous car at the start of the next year. Ferrari did this during the Schumi era a lot. But now, we have the TPC regulations that prevent testing of cars less than two years old. Does that mean that cars are no longer allowed to be carried over year-to-year? I mean what constitutes a "car" so to speak? Teams can reuse the same tub year-to-year without issue. So is it that bodywork is not allowed to be carried over? Doubt it, we have seen wings used across multiple years for most teams in this era.
I ask because I have yet to see evidence to conclusively prove that this car dubbed the RB21 is not just a mild update package for the RB20. But is Red Bull not allowed to say "this is the RB20" because it will be classified as illegal TPC? Very strange.
Note: even though I haven't been 100% convinced that this *cannot* be the RB20, I think it would make no sense for Red Bull to actually do this, especially in the last year of regulations and when their previous car clearly did not have the developmental momentum nor year-end competitive advantage that someone would want if they were going to carry the car over year-to-year.