1) The team was only working on the basics of the car design. They did not make any important decisions that would conflict or limit Newey's ability to design the car when he arrived. In essence, they were 3 months behind.continuum16 wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 05:00I know we have 140+ pages of waffle before RACE ONE but let me pose a few questions:
1) What on earth was Aston Martin doing between January 1 and March 1 2025? It seems the AMR26 and, to some extent, the PU packaging only really came into focus once Newey showed up. And yet the AMR25 was fairly undeveloped and uncompetitive. Was there an entirely scrapped AMR26 concept that we’ve never seen?
2) If the vibrations to the AMR26 monocoque are so severe, is a replacement monocoque not more feasible than redesigning the entire PU architecture, which would set them back even further? Especially since PU spec is frozen? Obviously not ideal but surely the lesser of two evils? Is it possible the explanation is so “simple” that the engine mounts are incorrectly located due to lateness/revisions/miscommunication?
3) IF (and that’s asking a lot) the chassis is “only” 1s off the top teams, is that not still a massive gulf? And what have we seen from this team in the last 8 years to suggest that they can effectively develop mid-season?
Sorry to pour gasoline onto the already healthy fire…
2) Your guess is as good as mine.
3) The car is heavily overweight, and it may weigh more with all the fixes they are doing to mitigate vibrations. No setup work has been done on the car so who knows how the chassis compares to the top teams at this stage.
