diffuser wrote: ↑10 Aug 2024, 03:03
peewon wrote: ↑10 Aug 2024, 01:59
zoroastar wrote: ↑09 Aug 2024, 17:08
thats probably true but i doubt mercedes will have the advantage that they did in 2014. honda and ferrari have learned a lot since then. given more equal power units, aero will be important. along with the packaging, where works teams should have an advantage. i think as much as power output, weight will be really important in the first year. especially in the hybrid bits.
The new regs are uncharted territory so impossible to say with certainty who stands where. Its a new challenge for everyone considering the relative size of the ICU to the battery pack. I think people connected in the paddock will have some idea and more clearly know who isnt doing well.
I don't think anybody know shiit. They talk good game but know shiit. This stuff is top secret everywhere. Not like teams are doing their 2026 PU R&D in the Paddock.
I think top level people have a general idea. F1 is a small, insular, incestous community where people talk. If a team is struggling especially, word gets around. Hamilton has said how much Ross Brawn and Niki Lauda convinced him to join Mercedes by telling him they were goin to be good. Merc was a midfield car like AM at the time. Helmut Marko very confidently predicted the pecking order for the new '22 aero regs. AM's very own wind tunnel numbers were the talk of the off season last year.
Doesnt mean exact performance levels are known or things cant deviate when they move from simulation to real life testing but information definitely flows in the paddock.