Alonso's onboard from Q1. Floor board and halo wing vibrates a lot.
Stop making shiit up.Nikosar wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 15:31Mercedes supply several teams the same engine as per regulations, but their customers don't have the same software.Artur Craft wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 10:34agree. Unless you draw the engines,the supplier can always provide inferior products to their customers
But seems they also didn't receive the newest Mercedes engine in testing, only getting access to it in Australia.
This makes it hard for Mercedes customers to catch up and properly optimise their engine.
With time deficits will reduce
The onboards in practice were a lot worse, you could hear the engine physically vibrate
I hope they highlight 'safety' concern and put some rubber gasket/washer between the tub and the mirror stay(s), atleast as a temporary measure. The driver will need mirrors in the race and an already 'difficult to see' situation will be made 'impossible to see' if the mirrors (alongwith the driver himself) vibrate from the extra vibrations.
Ted Kravitz:
"Aston Martin will request some kind of exemption under the cost cap. I don't think they'll grant it to them because they wouldn't grant it to any other team"
"Everything is really bad. If you think things are bad at Aston Martin, they're actually worse"
Sky Sports F1
Really? Do you think things are now going right? Or just not wrong?Alonso Fan wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 17:55This thread seems awfully quiet after quali... Do people seriously only come here when things are going wrong?
A lot of this doesn't apply to these regs cause there are no "in season" upgrades. From a performance perspective, the only manufactures that likely will be allowed "in season" upgrades are manufactures that supply only 1 team. I actually don't think anybody's ICE, except Honda, has a chance at being greater than 2% behind. Reliability upgrades are allowed and everyone is gonna want a reliability upgrade. If a manufacturer wants to change something in the PU for reliability reasons, that "change" has to be made available to everyone of the teams that the manufacturer supplies. All the supplied teams don't have to use it, but it has to be available for anyone to use it.API wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 17:572Diffuser : This is not always the case. If there is a new engine specification or a different one, it may not be the same. And everyone uses engines as they need.
If the customer agrees, it is not the same.
You'll just find exceptions. It doesn't apply universally.
The engines can also be muted, HPP will not allow full power,
If Aston say to the FIA ,we're not racing at the next 5 races cause we're out of batteries or what have you. If Honda supply more batteries, Honda are gonna go be over the CAP. What is the FIA gonna do ? say no ?AR3-GP wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 18:02Not sure what this is about
Ted Kravitz:
"Aston Martin will request some kind of exemption under the cost cap. I don't think they'll grant it to them because they wouldn't grant it to any other team"
"Everything is really bad. If you think things are bad at Aston Martin, they're actually worse"
Sky Sports F1