napoleon1981 wrote: ↑17 Mar 2024, 20:59
zibby43 wrote: ↑17 Mar 2024, 20:50
venkyhere wrote: ↑15 Mar 2024, 16:30
Did you see 2022 season ? How close the fight was for P1 for the first half of the season ? And how cars were able to follow very close ? Just because one team did a good job 'developing' the car from a 'first time right' concept , and others are lagging behind, doesn't make the regulation a failure. The fact that the wake is again dirty now, is because teams have found clever ways to exploit loopholes in the rules and make their cars faster, fallout being following closely is not as easy as 2022.
Allisons rant is classic sour grapes.
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/wolff ... /10588118/
Horner in 2015:
“Mercedes have done a super job,” said Horner back then. “They have a good car, a fantastic engine and they have two very good drivers.
“The problem is that the gap is so big that you end up with three-tier racing. That is not healthy for F1.
“They [the FIA] have a power output so they can see what every power unit is producing. They have the facts. They could quite easily come up with a way of some form of equalisation.”
What Allison said pales in comparison to this plain-as-day call for rules to be changed in order to specifically peg back the dominant car.
Wasn’t the last time Horner did it. Man, people have short memories I guess lol.
Unlike 2015, currently there are windtunnel penalties for the fastest team. So it is much hard for RB to what Merc did in 2015, times in which Merc was also spending substantially more than anyone else. If you want to watch racing where there are BOP adjustments, that is covered by other classes. F1 is not for you.
I don't understand your reply. Mostly because you didn't understand mine. I'm arguing against calling for rules changes to penalize the fastest team for doing the best job.
That's not what Allison was doing with his recent comments, unlike Horner back in 2015. Allison was speaking philosophically about the next rule set, echoing comments and sentiments expressed by Verstappen, Russell, and now Lando Norris.
Next, the "penalties" that exist now are a bit of a joke. There are ample opportunities for exclusions under the budget cap, and you can "game" the wind tunnel rules in the name of "cooling development."
Re: spending, it was nip and tuck with spending between Ferrari and Mercedes in the "uncapped" era. The revisionist history that Mercedes spent "substantially more" than other top teams is inaccurate. Between 2016 and 2019, Ferrari out-spent Mercedes 2x:
https://www.essentiallysports.com/f1-ne ... l-ferrari/
Finally, to your point about the hybrid era: Ever hear of the token system? It's ironic, just how the tokens helped inadvertently bake in Merc's advantage, the new rules have effectively done the same for RB.