Not really.
I assume you haven't looked at this year's cars yet, if you think the AM and Merc are similar.
The “not a big performance differentiation between cars” thought is interesting to me now we’ve actually seen them.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑01 Mar 2022, 16:29Too early to tell. Even Haas is in the mix. With this year I don't think there will be a big differentiator between the cars. It will be about who can tease out more grip from the tyres for marginal gains. As such i expect shuffling from track to track.
I think it's looking like that.west52keep64 wrote: ↑12 Mar 2022, 18:03It's very hard to tell what the full pecking order is, but for me the top 4 is clear:
Red Bull
Ferrari
McLaren
Mercedes
I wrote this quite some time ago, I think that it still stands up. I’m still hoping for a couple of surprises!!Stu wrote: ↑19 Dec 2021, 09:26Teams that appear to have used 2021 as a holding year with very few upgrades (Haas, Alfa, Williams, Aston, maybe Ferrari(??)), have obviously been concentrating on their 2022 cars. Also expect the two Ferrari customer teams to make a step when they get the latest power store. McLaren have been fully 2022 since the summer break as well.
Mercedes seem to be in a similar position. RedBull have appeared to have been developing the RB16B right to the end.
With how the aero regs are defined there is unlikely to be a magic bullet there, but potentially a lot of detail design and experiment could gain performance (unless they ‘get lucky’ this year’s front-runners) will need to careful as playing catch-up is very limited due to the tunnel/CFD runs that are allowed.
I’m hoping for a couple of surprises!
Sounds good. Good to see the midfield teams pretty close. Bet most people surprised at RB though. Mega amounts of media reports that they hadnt bothered to develop the RB18.....But, at the end of testing, thats the complete opposite, with probably the best car on track at the end of the periodStu wrote: ↑12 Mar 2022, 20:28I wrote this quite some time ago, I think that it still stands up. I’m still hoping for a couple of surprises!!Stu wrote: ↑19 Dec 2021, 09:26Teams that appear to have used 2021 as a holding year with very few upgrades (Haas, Alfa, Williams, Aston, maybe Ferrari(??)), have obviously been concentrating on their 2022 cars. Also expect the two Ferrari customer teams to make a step when they get the latest power store. McLaren have been fully 2022 since the summer break as well.
Mercedes seem to be in a similar position. RedBull have appeared to have been developing the RB16B right to the end.
With how the aero regs are defined there is unlikely to be a magic bullet there, but potentially a lot of detail design and experiment could gain performance (unless they ‘get lucky’ this year’s front-runners) will need to careful as playing catch-up is very limited due to the tunnel/CFD runs that are allowed.
I’m hoping for a couple of surprises!