Apparently a giraffe has a vain that goes from its right shoulder to its left shoulder via its head.DChemTech wrote: ↑14 Jul 2020, 17:16I don't think they deliberately changed the rules to hamper competition either, but the way the rules was changed did hamper competition in practice, which should (and could, and probably to an extend was) be realized upfront. However, keep in mind there was not one -big- regulation change that -massively- hampered high rake cars. There were small changes, each time hampering everyone to some extend, and high rake setups more than average. But I can very well imagine that each time, Red Bull figured that a total concept overhaul would set them back more than sticking with the concept - a full concept overhaul may have taken more than one year to get on top of. And every time, they were probably right in that, had there not been an at that point unforeseen change in the next year, plus an extension of the current formula this year. Had they known all these things, perhaps they would have changed more radically in 2016 or so.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑14 Jul 2020, 16:55The thing is that I don’t believe that the regulations were changed in order to hamper the other competitors and they have had several years to change their approach to rake if they wanted to... If what some think in this thread (that low rake is superior with the current set of regulations than high rake), I find it hard to believe that Red Bull didn’t realized this too and didn’t made a change in their philosophy.DChemTech wrote:
Well, aside from difficulties, it just doesn't make sense that when one team is dominating, you alter the regulations such that it's even more difficult for competitors to catch up.
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And still, it doesn't change my point. If you change regulations because racing is boring because one team is dominating, you need to keep in mind what effect that regulation change will have, considering the car philosophies teams are using at that point- and if it makes the already dominating concept even more dominating, you should not push the change. Especially if it essentially forces all teams to follow the same philosophy as the leading team. It's nice if teams can compete with different philosophies, cars look enough alike as it is. That the most successful car
upgrade this year seems to be the one team that just copy/pasted last years front runner, shows how dire the state of F1 regulation is. If we're going that way anyway, i'd rather just see a standardized chassis - at least in that case the other teams do get a proper chance to compete.
Had it known from the beginning its neck was going t be that long it would have found a way to go straight across.
Each time the neck grew it was just a little extra to add, less than going straight across, and the next time, and the next time etc.
Small steps add up until it is a huge job to alter the way you have been working and probably not worth it unless you are forced to. Besides, Newey probably understands the present system perfectly and it could take a few years to adapt if it changed. (AN) Helmet, can we have a bad car for 2 years while I sort this out? (HM) Sod off