Daniel might be the past, but he has already demonstrated that he can drive the RB19 at a competitive level. Perez OTOH has been a disaster for most of the season. Daniel was let go from McLaren for less.
Daniel might be the past, but he has already demonstrated that he can drive the RB19 at a competitive level. Perez OTOH has been a disaster for most of the season. Daniel was let go from McLaren for less.
Seriously though, do you have any concrete sources for all of this?Wouter wrote: ↑15 Oct 2023, 15:14.Bill wrote: ↑15 Oct 2023, 14:59.
If the rumours are true then it shows that redbull are heading in the wrong direction .the porsche deal failed because of power struggles may horner and some show the writing on the wall that they will small fish in a pond populated by big sharks.what may be good for an individual may not be best for the whole redbull entity.
Dietrich Mateschitz (49% shares) and Helmut Marko wanted to continue with Porsche. The Thai branch of Red Bull GmbH (51%) and Horner wanted to continue with Ford. So it became Ford.
Horner and the Thai people wanted Peter Bayer as CEO at AlphaTauri and he got the job.
Now Horner wants to bring Ricciardo back to RBR, he has always been his favorite. Here again the Thai people were decisive
and not Helmut Marko with the Austrian branch (only 49%) of Red Bull GmbH.
First: Isn't university students pretty much the opposite of truckers? Or is trucker a university degree wherever you're from?Bill wrote:the world is not europe ,from where i come from people most drink canned beer .redbull is mostly drank by university students ,those pretending to be athlete and other group i mentioned,they are other cheap alternative that people buy so not popular choice
.Juzh wrote: ↑16 Oct 2023, 00:30.Wouter wrote: ↑15 Oct 2023, 15:14Dietrich Mateschitz (49% shares) and Helmut Marko wanted to continue with Porsche. The Thai branch of Red Bull GmbH (51%) and Horner wanted to continue with Ford. So it became Ford.
Horner and the Thai people wanted Peter Bayer as CEO at AlphaTauri and he got the job.
Now Horner wants to bring Ricciardo back to RBR, he has always been his favorite. Here again the Thai people were decisive
and not Helmut Marko with the Austrian branch (only 49%) of Red Bull GmbH.
Seriously though, do you have any concrete sources for all of this?
For me unless some real quotes are revealed this isn't common knowledge its German speculation.Wouter wrote: ↑16 Oct 2023, 09:25.Juzh wrote: ↑16 Oct 2023, 00:30.Wouter wrote: ↑15 Oct 2023, 15:14Dietrich Mateschitz (49% shares) and Helmut Marko wanted to continue with Porsche. The Thai branch of Red Bull GmbH (51%) and Horner wanted to continue with Ford. So it became Ford.
Horner and the Thai people wanted Peter Bayer as CEO at AlphaTauri and he got the job.
Now Horner wants to bring Ricciardo back to RBR, he has always been his favorite. Here again the Thai people were decisive
and not Helmut Marko with the Austrian branch (only 49%) of Red Bull GmbH.
Seriously though, do you have any concrete sources for all of this?
Sure, several German interviews last months on TV and in newspapers. Why are you asking? This is new to you?
Red Bull dominates Formula 1 with Max Verstappen, but the current industry leader is anything but harmony. An explosive power struggle has broken out behind the scenes.
The Brazilian broadcaster Globo first reported that Dr. Helmut Marko is to be forced out of his position as head of motorsport at Red Bull - of all people by long-time team boss and companion Christian Horner. However, the conflict has a history.
"In the past there was a rumor that AlphaTauri was to be sold. But the sale was then prevented from Salzburg because it was another wish of the late Didi Mateschitz. Then it was decided that more support was needed. Christian Horner, in turn, took this as an opportunity to say: “If I am to support more, I also have to have more influence,” explains Sky expert Ralf Schumacher.
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The explosive power struggle within the world champion team is being watched like a hawk in Formula 1. But who will decide this for themselves? "Dr. Marko was always the link between Salzburg, the interests of the team, but also the interests of Didi Mateschitz and was the advisor," said Schumacher and continued: "Horner was hired by Dr. Marko at the time, but he was and is "It's not without controversy in Salzburg. You shouldn't forget that the Thai shareholder has slightly different interests. Apparently Horner is more oriented towards Thailand at the moment because he had a difficult life in Salzburg."
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Schumacher advises respectful interaction and a prudent approach. "Unrest causes performance to suffer. That's why you should be very careful and think about what you have achieved together."
Wasn't RB18 --> RB19 a big change btw?AR3-GP wrote: ↑16 Oct 2023, 19:46If we are to see a significant evolution of the RB design philosophy, 2024 will be the last opportunity based on what teams are saying about '24 car setting the tone for '25 due to '26 regs. Therefore, I do not believe we will see major changes to the RB car again. RB20 will likely just be a subtle refinement of the RB19.
I believe the most significant change was that the RB19 was much lighter. Beyond that, the initial version of the RB19 wasn't that different from the late RB18. Both of them never really had porpoising problems, so they've both always had really stable aero characteristics. Both are also really efficient.Paa wrote:Wasn't RB18 --> RB19 a big change btw?AR3-GP wrote: ↑16 Oct 2023, 19:46If we are to see a significant evolution of the RB design philosophy, 2024 will be the last opportunity based on what teams are saying about '24 car setting the tone for '25 due to '26 regs. Therefore, I do not believe we will see major changes to the RB car again. RB20 will likely just be a subtle refinement of the RB19.
I'm no expert, and I realize that the surface was almost literally identical, but RB18 riding high vs RB19 riding low, seems like a big change in floor philosophy, isn't it?
edit: also RB18 was maybe more about topspeed, while RB19 was tuned to more cornering, to simplify it massively.
I don't think the floor philosophy changed that much. The location of the throat and the tunnel, keel, diffuser shape seemed to be roughly similar to the RB18.Paa wrote: ↑16 Oct 2023, 20:16Wasn't RB18 --> RB19 a big change btw?AR3-GP wrote: ↑16 Oct 2023, 19:46If we are to see a significant evolution of the RB design philosophy, 2024 will be the last opportunity based on what teams are saying about '24 car setting the tone for '25 due to '26 regs. Therefore, I do not believe we will see major changes to the RB car again. RB20 will likely just be a subtle refinement of the RB19.
I'm no expert, and I realize that the surface was almost literally identical, but RB18 riding high vs RB19 riding low, seems like a big change in floor philosophy, isn't it?
edit: also RB18 was maybe more about topspeed, while RB19 was tuned to more cornering, to simplify it massively.