organic wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 23:03
I guess but switching to a RB philosophy at the end of year 1 also doesn't have much promise. You will be a year behind RB's development and have to tackle problems that they already have. All Merc and Ferrari can do is hope that their concepts will develop well and offer more performance down the line, unless they really hit a wall and have to abandon it (like the w13's original floor concept but luckily they could ditch that early)
RB won't have stood still, if you copy RB you will always be behind them unless you figure out how to do something better or find a loophole in the rules Newey and co haven't spotted. I think for Mercedes and Ferrari, they are better of sticking with their concepts and evolving them.
I think winning 1-2 titles in a 4 year regulation set starting off with losing 6 months development time like Merc did would be positive and show success of choosing to stick with their own concept
As I said if they can get the sidepods to work as intended, then Mercedes will be justified in not giving up. The regulation changes in 2026 are massive from the aero to the synthetic fuels. You can worry about the future or try and win under the current set of regulations. All Mercedes have to do is learn from this and not be caught out when the regulations change again.
It's why RB stuck with the high rake, despite Merc having a lot of success with their ideas.
Different teams have different philosophies, there is an element of copying ideas if F1. But rarely does it work out too well when teams attempt to copy a car wholesale.
As for the data side of things? This article has useful information about how they use CFD, timescales etc and why the team decided to use AMD EPYC processors over other options.
https://www.amd.com/en/case-studies/f1- ... g-petronas