KimiRai wrote: ↑01 Jan 2025, 20:24
Red Bull, which arrived at the end of last season with “breathlessness” due to development that did not give the right performance to the RB20, will have more [wind tunnel] time in the first half of the season. A 10 percent increase over the same period in 2024. In total, the Milton Keynes-based team will be able to take advantage of 96 more wind tunnel “runs” and 600 more CFD elements in the first half of 2025 than in the past championship. The Austrian team is reportedly well ahead of its rivals in terms of assembling the new single-seater.
As learned by our editorial staff, on the sidelines of the “technical departure” of Adrian Newey who decided to leave the multi-champion team, the new technical manager Pierre Waché preferred to speed up the work and not a little. Crash test already passed for the Red Bull RB21, which will take the track as early as January for a filming day. The intent is to arrive at the scheduled tests in Bahrain with more knowledge of the merits and flaws of the technical design, to accelerate the car's development in the six-month period when it will have more time to be able to make evolutionary or corrective changes to the RB21.
https://www.funoanalisitecnica.com/2025 ... -2025.html
As mentioned, this timeline is quite unusual for Red Bull who usually wait until the last moment to build the chassis in order to maximise development time.
This could be a symptom of the no-Newey-era (I suspect he favoured the last minute approach because he felt it had the highest ceiling) but I also think it might be because Red Bull have the most low hanging fruit - I think their car had the most “problems” of the top teams in’24. Think about not being able to use the curbs - that’s a lot of ‘free’ laptime left on the table.
I hope I’m wrong (as a Ferrari fan) but I suspect other teams will have to work harder and change more to compete with Red Bull this year.