Not sure. It's possible they were locked into certain decisions by the previous application that are no longer feasible..
The more troubling take is Mintzlaff not wanting to pay for it...
Helmut Marko says Max's brakes 'detoriated rapidly' during the race
"We had changed the brake pads and somehow they deteriorated rapidly during the race."
"That didn't give him the right feeling. Sometimes he braked predominantly with the front of the car, sometimes predominantly with the rear. It made it very difficult for him to drive at the limit, but he worked around those problems masterfully."
Latest update on the new windtunnel is that it's being planned in a new location and will still be ready for the '26 car.
The world champion squad had originally planned to build a brand new facility at its base, which it felt was needed to keep the team at the cutting edge of F1 car development over the long term.
A site near its technology campus had been sorted and the team had formally applied for planning permission for construction to go ahead.
However, as part of major ongoing developments at Milton Keynes in the wake of the construction of a new Red Bull Powertrains facility and more factory expansion, the team has elected to now slightly shift the location of the planned wind tunnel.
The change, which will put the facility in a more suitable location, means that the original planning permission is no longer valid and has been withdrawn.
It is understood that fresh paperwork will now be prepared to be submitted for approval.
While this new process will take some time, the team believes that the change of location will not actually have much of an impact on when the facility should be up-and-running, with it likely to be what the team uses for development of its 2026 car.
This doesn't make much sense.organic wrote: ↑24 Oct 2023, 01:40Thank you very much for posting that and it's relieving
However I don't think there's much to be gained from the new tunnel - not nearly as much as McLaren/AMR would gain from theirs.
For RB It seems to be a cost efficiency thing: Newey talked about the current WT last year and complained that because it's not originally designed for F1 it's not perfect in some obvious ways. It's massive and old: it takes a long time to get up to speed and there is a lot of air to heat.
Such issues for the meantime are somewhat lessened by the team not getting to run the WT much thanks to the sliding scale.. but makes sense to make the change with budget cap here to stay
er what ?
RB have continuously upgraded the current WT. Every couple of years afaikValeVida46 wrote: ↑24 Oct 2023, 12:16This doesn't make much sense.organic wrote: ↑24 Oct 2023, 01:40Thank you very much for posting that and it's relieving
However I don't think there's much to be gained from the new tunnel - not nearly as much as McLaren/AMR would gain from theirs.
For RB It seems to be a cost efficiency thing: Newey talked about the current WT last year and complained that because it's not originally designed for F1 it's not perfect in some obvious ways. It's massive and old: it takes a long time to get up to speed and there is a lot of air to heat.
Such issues for the meantime are somewhat lessened by the team not getting to run the WT much thanks to the sliding scale.. but makes sense to make the change with budget cap here to stay
If it's not perfect in obvious ways, and other teams gain from having newer wind tunnels, why would there not be "much to be gained"?
The team still need a wind tunnel regardless of the sliding scale.