Actually, didn’t Haas had to redesign their brakes for this season because in 2020 they are considered listed parts? In the past, they copied Ferrari’s, this year they had to “design” them in order to make the car legal.Big Tea wrote:Nit picking I agree, but there is nothing that ' mustn't be copied to stay within the rules '. Its that mustn't be designed or manufactured by another competing team. Its not the copying that is the problem its where it was made and designed. Haas have their car built by Dalara and if they completely reverse engineered this years Ferrari and got it built it would be legal. If any of the listed parts actually came from Ferrari, or even were designed by Haas and manufactured by Ferrari that is not allowed.Emag wrote: ↑15 Jul 2020, 11:15The different parts you mentioned are listed parts and are supposed to be built by them, otherwise the car would be illegal.ScrewCaptain27 wrote: ↑15 Jul 2020, 10:34Will we get this s**t over and done with? The RP20 and W10 might look the same on the outside, but are very different on the inside as we can clearly see on this thread. The front suspension internals are very different. Cooling package is different. They are rather important elements if you ask me.
The actual truth is that there is barely anything unique on this car. They copied whatever they could from Mercedes. The stuff they couldn't copy, they recreated to match them as closely as possible, and the stuff that mustn't be copied to stay within the rules, they made themselves.
It's as simple as that. I personally don't like this approach at all, but whether people like it or not doesn't matter at all in my opinion. If what they did is fine with the FIA, then they will get away with it even if all of us don't agree, because at the end of the day, it's the FIA decision that matters the most.
They will be racing with an already proven aero concept. With better understanding of the car, they will be able to extract more out of it. They probably still don't know how that car works. What happens to it under load etc. When they figure that out, and match the mechanical setup accordingly, then I don't see any reason why it shouldn't perform nearly as well as the 2019 Mercedes even with those different bits you mentioned.
Edit: And to be honest, being nearly as fast as the 2019 Mercedes is a huge advantage. That car was an absolute beast, especially in the early part of 2019. The 2019 car is probably good enough to win races this year and if you are anywhere near that car in terms of performance as a midfielder, then you are in for a good season.
Not picking on Haas and Ferrari, just using it as a comparison. It could have been Red Bull and STR.
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