Better picture of the RB rims;
There will be left hand threads on one side and right hand threads on the other.
Perhaps it compounds to the problem?
Develop a solid base, make sure airflow is going where they want. Very, very small tweaks, wait on the Renault PU upgrade. Continue on methodically seems to be very much RBR's approach. I would not expect a B-spec car as some have discussed. I very much expect them to own 3rd for the first half and push towards the front the second half and switch to the 2018 car very early on. Now 2018 I truly believe with a much improved PU/stable rules that they will jump to the top and Max will be world champion.digitalrurouni wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 15:02I think the Red Bull is a beautiful machine except for that hole in the nose. But it just seems to me that sure they have a weaker PU but they are really on the back foot this year more so than last year. They are performing well above what the car is supposed to in reality because of their superb driver lineup. Do others feel the same way? I just don't see how unless they have a fundamental rethink this car will produce dramatic leaps in performance mid season as a lot of folks here seem to be predicting. I would be very glad to be proved wrong though! But to me it seems like they really underestimated their competition this year. Everybody kept saying Adrian Newey will design a staggeringly performant car but so far it seems to be far from it.
Horner said the main issues RB faced are aero based. The development is a very significant aero upgrade according to Horner and Newey is heavily engaged in which was described as being 'very expensive'. He also quashed the rumour that RB have been hampered by the suspension clarification, they were working on a system but it was too heavy to bring to the car and that development has ceased. The aero difficulties are not related to the trick suspension bans.Flying JPS Lotus wrote: ↑13 Apr 2017, 16:55According to Marko RBR will be bringing a B-spec car to Spain. Will be interesting to see what changes the new car will have to the original. I wonder if we'll see a car with a longer wheelbase or new suspension system.
Perhaps the issues hampering them aren't to do with the suspension clarification. But the suspension clarification was to do with the how it interacted with the attitude(yaw, pitch, roll) of the car. And aero is a direct correlation to all of those.
I remember it exactly as Chuckjr notes. I remember Newey being interviewed with his notebook open and he was making notes about the Sauber. I can remember him being asked what he was interested in and Newey was extremely complimentary about the Sauber coanda solution.