These are all great thoughts but in the interest of bringing it back to the Mercedes team topic perhaps we can use a Mercedes matter as the discussion point. In this case it would make sense to have a discussion about their America's Cup involvement:
https://the-race.com/formula-1/inside-m ... the-water/
The obvious area of collaboration, and one that has been talked about extensively over the past year or so, is in the crucial foils and associated wing details, which bring aerodynamic and hydrodynamic challenges.
But there’s also been a contribution on the hull structure, which Willis has described as “very similar in concept to how we build our chassis”.
As Allison explains, when you dig into the details of a highly technical project like an America’s Cup boat, the crossover with the specialism of F1 team personnel is enormous.
“The challenge of the boat will eventually touch on the skill set of most of the people on the engineering and manufacturing side in this team,” says Allison.
“If you were to go and dig through the boat you’d see there’s things in it that would interest a cooling engineer, a hydraulics engineer, a structural engineer, a composites engineer, a mechanical mechanisms guy, an aerodynamicist, you just name it.
“The full gamut of electronics, data acquisition sensors, for pretty much everything that makes up the backbone of an F1 team you could find some parts of an America’s Cup boat that they could work on and be excited by.
“So the type of people that we hope to bring to the party on this project will cover all the technical areas in our team, but not necessarily all at the same time.
“So at the moment, the type of people from the F1 world that are involved are some aerodynamicist type guys, some performance simulation type guys, software type guys, planners.”
“This is not in the pursuit of margin, but it is more in the pursuit of learning, of diversification for the benefit of Formula 1.
“And it’s a great new project for engineers that have earned their laurels in Formula 1, but want to look at something different. Having said that, it needs to stand on its own commercial legs.”
Anyone who can read knows the teams are exploiting all of the grey areas of the regulations. Before '23, these extracurricular projects did not have to be accounted for in how they benefit F1. Now they do.
Fair play to everyone involved for maximizing the regulatory blind spots if and when they are available. You can only play to the rules as they are written,
at the time that they are written. I imagine Mercedes will have to operate under slightly different assumptions due to TD45.
A lion must kill its prey.