GrizzleBoy wrote: ↑26 Jul 2025, 23:20
So it turns out the no.2 Red Bull car is capable of making it out of Q1 when the team isn't purposely just not giving the no.2 car upgrades or parts so the no.1 driver can have them as spares or replacements.
I've always suspected this type of BS ever since Mark Weber was at RB with his forever broken KERS that only ever occurred on his car.
Never expected them to just come out and say it.
Infact, it seems to be much more public when one driver has parts the other doesn't these days.
Red Bull's no.2 car was in Q3 at Spa every single year since 2020. That spans Albon, Perez, and Tsunoda. We have to challenge ourselves to actually think critically on this forum.
If Red Bull's "updates" were worth so much laptime this year to take Tsunoda from Q1 to Q3, Verstappen would actually be fighting for the championship. What's happened here at Spa doesn't seem to be anything more than the usual Red Bull track favoring that allowed all of Albon, Perez, and Tsunoda to make Q3 here no matter how poorly they performed before and after Spa. Tsunoda also benefitted from being able to change his setup. Red Bull friday setups are always poor. Spa has big field spread, so there's bigger window to qualify into. Norris was 6 tenths off yesterday and still started P3 in the sprint. Perez was 6 tenths off last year and started P2. Tsunoda when you account for his low downfroce qualy trim wing, as well as Verstappen's higher downforce wing and mistakes, was still somewhere around 6 tenths back. On any other circuit this is a Q1/Q2 knockout again.
What some don't seem to notice are the actual gaps. Tsunoda was 2 tenths behind Max when he was knocked out in Q1 in Austria. 2 tenths. With the supposed old car with no upgrades that could only enter Q3 with a magical 7 tenths upgrade package that Red Bull have been hiding from him...are people this naive? Max still isn't fighting for the championship with the "updates" which underlines what they are worth...
It doesn't turn.