I wouldn't agree with that at all. Simulation technology is very good but like I mentioned before, outside of F1's testing ban, no-one are putting parts on cars without physical durability and performance testing. Its simply not yet good enough. Simulation helps give you a direction but it is in no way a replacement for testing just yet.wesley123 wrote: Even if testing was opened up again, I don't think many teams would choose to test a lot. With the money spent on it, simulators have improved quite a lot and are getting ever closer to the real thing. You dont need to send a large group of people away for a week to test a few new parts anymore. No, you can do that at home and test those parts in a few hours.
Teams would only test in real life to confirm the simulator, but that's it. Timewise it is much more efficient to use the simulator, and with all the data gathered the simulator will become closer and closer to real life, making real life testing less and less important.
How many times have you seen teams bring parts to friday practice that were in the bin before qualifying saturday. Quite often... Its a sign of the accuracy of the development process when phyical testing is removed from it.
If testing was opened up, every team will test because its simply a necessary part of the development process.