venkyhere wrote: ↑19 Mar 2024, 10:36
So ?
Newey's rant was equally bad.
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venkyhere wrote: ↑19 Mar 2024, 08:01
Didn't expect an engineer to cry in the same fashion, is all.
It's nothing new, which is why it shouldn't be surprising
venkyhere wrote: ↑19 Mar 2024, 10:36
However, atleast he was (still is) part of a 'customer team' who had the (however silly) excuse to blame the supplier and cry for equalizer rule changes, simply because he actually couldn't do anything (paying the price for bad decision making whilst fixing their engine supplier). In this case, is the aerodynamic package coming to the Mercedes team from outside ? No. It's their own.
I don't see why a decision to outsource a component of the car is somehow better because it allows finger pointing exercises. As you say, it's a silly excuse.
However, they're not equally comparable. Engines didn't have budget caps.
venkyhere wrote: ↑19 Mar 2024, 10:36
Of course, but the gaps are smaller. The bottom 5 teams are close to each other, P19 and P20 cars are not finishing 30 seconds behind P11 and P12. In the non-cost-cap era, top teams could get away by 'throwing money at the problem' whilst the bottom teams didn't have money to throw at the problem anyway. The cost-cap era forces 'first time right' a lot and that's the only reason the big boys like Ferrari/Mercedes/McLaren are behind RedBull. Not because they dont know how to tackle the problem. The freedom to experiment like Thomas Alva Edison, is gone.
When was there a time bottom 5 weren't close to each other and why?
There are some outliers like Marussia or Minardi but in general the gaps have largely remained the same.
Your explanation reads as though the cap was introduced to close the bottom 5 up with the downside encumbrance of "first time right" to excuse unheralded domination.
I don't believe that was the reason for the budget cap introduction.