Well given Alpine were hardballing Alonso on a contract extension, I’m guessing the sensible thing was to have Esteban do any sim work until you knew Alonso was or wasnt signing?
Well given Alpine were hardballing Alonso on a contract extension, I’m guessing the sensible thing was to have Esteban do any sim work until you knew Alonso was or wasnt signing?
Yeah, if that's true and Ocon was still slower than Alonso at most tracks? What does that say about Ocon's driving abilities? Plus Alonso was on it as of FP1, why would you ask him to Sim work? Ocon often didn't find or didn't figure out the balance till Q3. Maybe they were forcing Ocon to do alot of Sim cause he needed it? Without the sim work, maybe in that 1/3 of the races that he found it in Q3, he would never have found it.
That may be overstating it! Assuming Ocon and Gasly avoid colliding, then it could just be another solid pairing for Benetton similar to Fisichella and Wurz.
The original five year plan from late 2015 was to win the championship by 2020, the new 100-race (approx. 5 year) plan is to win the championship by 2025 I believe.
Weren’t changes almost frozen from 2020 to 2021 due to Covid? There were a couple of tokens that could be used, but I believe major changes to the chassis couldn’t happen because of it.diffuser wrote: ↑25 Nov 2022, 03:42My guess would be that they didn't run the PU cause they didn't want to spend the time and money to make the chassis changes to incorporate the new PU for 2021. Instead, in their words, they built the 2022 chassis. That's the chassis that core is completely decoupled from the aero. The outer jigsaw puzzle aero layer has apparently saved the money in upgrades....they say.
They were but McLaren were allowed to make changes for a new PU. So the FIA opened the door.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑26 Nov 2022, 19:01Weren’t changes almost frozen from 2020 to 2021 due to Covid? There were a couple of tokens that could be used, but I believe major changes to the chassis couldn’t happen because of it.diffuser wrote: ↑25 Nov 2022, 03:42My guess would be that they didn't run the PU cause they didn't want to spend the time and money to make the chassis changes to incorporate the new PU for 2021. Instead, in their words, they built the 2022 chassis. That's the chassis that core is completely decoupled from the aero. The outer jigsaw puzzle aero layer has apparently saved the money in upgrades....they say.
McLaren situation was unique because of a change of PU manufacturer and used all of their tokens making the change… Alpine wouldn’t have been able to make chassis changes to accommodate the new PU in 2021 (assuming installation required more modifications than what the token system allowed).diffuser wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 00:15They were but McLaren were allowed to make changes for a new PU. So the FIA opened the door.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑26 Nov 2022, 19:01Weren’t changes almost frozen from 2020 to 2021 due to Covid? There were a couple of tokens that could be used, but I believe major changes to the chassis couldn’t happen because of it.diffuser wrote: ↑25 Nov 2022, 03:42My guess would be that they didn't run the PU cause they didn't want to spend the time and money to make the chassis changes to incorporate the new PU for 2021. Instead, in their words, they built the 2022 chassis. That's the chassis that core is completely decoupled from the aero. The outer jigsaw puzzle aero layer has apparently saved the money in upgrades....they say.
Why didn't Alpine spend the tokens on the chassis? The '21 car had no purpose other than to give them the best chance for '22.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 21:08McLaren situation was unique because of a change of PU manufacturer and used all of their tokens making the change… Alpine wouldn’t have been able to make chassis changes to accommodate the new PU in 2021 (assuming installation required more modifications than what the token system allowed).diffuser wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 00:15They were but McLaren were allowed to make changes for a new PU. So the FIA opened the door.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑26 Nov 2022, 19:01
Weren’t changes almost frozen from 2020 to 2021 due to Covid? There were a couple of tokens that could be used, but I believe major changes to the chassis couldn’t happen because of it.
I will have to dig into the token system for 2020 - 2021 transition… But the Token system didn’t cover every part of the car, it could very well:AR3-GP wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 21:09Why didn't Alpine spend the tokens on the chassis? The '21 car had no purpose other than to give them the best chance for '22.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 21:08McLaren situation was unique because of a change of PU manufacturer and used all of their tokens making the change… Alpine wouldn’t have been able to make chassis changes to accommodate the new PU in 2021 (assuming installation required more modifications than what the token system allowed).
Alpine/Renault is a big corporation and these executives have an innate habit of covering their rear's....You have to know when you are being sold a sob story. The simple explanation is incompetence whether it was the allocation of resources to achieve the best result, or simply having the right people on the job but this gets papered over.
McLaren changed their chassis significantly for 2021 with a new monocoque, Alpine could have done so also.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 21:16A) Not allowed chassis changes (the whole point of the token system and freeze towards 2021 was cost savings due to a shorten season affected by Covid).
- McLaren production director Piers ThynneThe back of the chassis and gearbox bell housing around the engine have changed significantly to adapt to the new power unit.
Again, McLaren also replaced all of these components for 2021:SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 21:16B) With the allowed Tokens, they wouldn’t have completed the installation, therefore rendering it meaningless if you are compromising.
- McLaren production director Piers ThynneChanging power unit greatly alters the architecture of the car and the way everything is packaged, so the entire cooling layout and all the pipework, be that for fluid or air, has changed, along with all electrical harnessing and control boxes.
Yep, Alpine could have asked for the same thing. Point is, they didn't even try.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 21:08McLaren situation was unique because of a change of PU manufacturer and used all of their tokens making the change… Alpine wouldn’t have been able to make chassis changes to accommodate the new PU in 2021 (assuming installation required more modifications than what the token system allowed).diffuser wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 00:15They were but McLaren were allowed to make changes for a new PU. So the FIA opened the door.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑26 Nov 2022, 19:01
Weren’t changes almost frozen from 2020 to 2021 due to Covid? There were a couple of tokens that could be used, but I believe major changes to the chassis couldn’t happen because of it.
McLaren got dispensation from the FIA due to a change of Manufacturers, not to install a new PU… Those changes couldn’t provide a “performance” improvement and had to be validated by the FIA as necessary for the installation.. McLaren commented all through that season that they couldn’t make the most out of the change of PU’s because the implementation couldn’t be optimized due to the restrictions.JordanMugen wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 21:21McLaren changed their chassis significantly for 2021 with a new monocoque, Alpine could have done so also.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 21:16A) Not allowed chassis changes (the whole point of the token system and freeze towards 2021 was cost savings due to a shorten season affected by Covid).
- McLaren production director Piers ThynneThe back of the chassis and gearbox bell housing around the engine have changed significantly to adapt to the new power unit.
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/2021- ... 6/5276306/
Again, McLaren also replaced all of these components for 2021:SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 21:16B) With the allowed Tokens, they wouldn’t have completed the installation, therefore rendering it meaningless if you are compromising.
- McLaren production director Piers ThynneChanging power unit greatly alters the architecture of the car and the way everything is packaged, so the entire cooling layout and all the pipework, be that for fluid or air, has changed, along with all electrical harnessing and control boxes.
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/2021- ... 6/5276306/
You are missing the point completely… McLaren’s contract to move to Mercedes was signed before Covid hit the 2020 season… When it happens a mandated chassis freeze was set in place, no Team could make changes to their cars.diffuser wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 23:30Yep, Alpine could have asked for the same thing. Point is, they didn't even try.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Nov 2022, 21:08McLaren situation was unique because of a change of PU manufacturer and used all of their tokens making the change… Alpine wouldn’t have been able to make chassis changes to accommodate the new PU in 2021 (assuming installation required more modifications than what the token system allowed).
To me, there is no difference to McLaren asking to make chassis changes because they were planing to change PU manufactures for 2021 and Alpine planning to release a new PU for 2021 that require chassis changes. You can't penalise Alpine just because they're an engine manufacturer. Fact is, they both planned the change for 2021.