I’m starting to think Newey’s words about being understaffed in the aero department were being kind. The staff there currently are utterly incompetent.
He also said that they need to give 100% in Q1 while other are just building.Nikosar wrote: ↑26 Jul 2025, 16:30It was kind of expected, guys. why do you all look so surprised? Sprints are still tough for Aston to get right, and during practice we didn’t manage to find the right setup for the car. We will improve.
But one interesting thing to note from yesterday was Alonso’s comment after qualifying: 'Our best lap is always in Q1.' Other teams seem to build pace through the session, but not Aston.
Of course, we’d need to double-check past qualifying data to confirm that trend, but if it's true, why do you think Aston struggles with this?
Like I said, think they've setup for a wet race.Rikrikrik wrote: ↑26 Jul 2025, 16:35FROM TWITTER
Aston's weekend:
They bring a rear wing that works, a front wing not designed for this circuit that they don’t think they’ll use, they test it for 3 laps and end up using it. And all this while going back to the Imola floor for ride height.
The sprint happens, and they fit the Miami rear wing (10th team there) and make a big setup change without testing it, starting with used tires to get a feel because THEY’RE FLYING BLIND.
Knowing ALL THESE HANDICAPS, they decide to do the lap almost 2 minutes before everyone else.
BUT DOES ANYONE THINK THERE?
Mike Krack is in charge of the track-side operations. He is the one responsible for this mess. Who is he blackmailing that he is still kept on the team?Rikrikrik wrote: ↑26 Jul 2025, 16:35FROM TWITTER
Aston's weekend:
They bring a rear wing that works, a front wing not designed for this circuit that they don’t think they’ll use, they test it for 3 laps and end up using it. And all this while going back to the Imola floor for ride height.
The sprint happens, and they fit the Miami rear wing (10th team there) and make a big setup change without testing it, starting with used tires to get a feel because THEY’RE FLYING BLIND.
Knowing ALL THESE HANDICAPS, they decide to do the lap almost 2 minutes before everyone else.
BUT DOES ANYONE THINK THERE?
That might make no sense… Then the rest of the grid is not setup for wet at all…diffuser wrote: ↑26 Jul 2025, 16:37Like I said, think they've setup for a wet race.Rikrikrik wrote: ↑26 Jul 2025, 16:35FROM TWITTER
Aston's weekend:
They bring a rear wing that works, a front wing not designed for this circuit that they don’t think they’ll use, they test it for 3 laps and end up using it. And all this while going back to the Imola floor for ride height.
The sprint happens, and they fit the Miami rear wing (10th team there) and make a big setup change without testing it, starting with used tires to get a feel because THEY’RE FLYING BLIND.
Knowing ALL THESE HANDICAPS, they decide to do the lap almost 2 minutes before everyone else.
BUT DOES ANYONE THINK THERE?