If it's Red Bull then it would be this but backwards, Red Bull punches above it's weight in qualifying.pantherxxx wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 18:09This could theoretically explain why Lando Norris was able to be 1 second per lap faster than Verstappen at the beginning of the Singapore GP. McLaren’s car would be perfectly set up to handle the heavy load, while other teams, forced to compromise, might struggle with balance, grip, and tire management early on.
At the start of the race, with a full fuel load, most teams would be using a compromised setup that balances qualifying performance with race performance. However, if McLaren (using this trick) could start the race with an optimal setup tailored specifically for a heavy fuel load (via ride height adjustments), they could achieve better stability, downforce, and grip from the very first lap.
As the race progresses and fuel burns off, the car becomes lighter. A lower ride height would once again be optimal for aerodynamics. Since McLaren’s ride height was raised for the heavier fuel load, they might lose the aerodynamic edge once the car becomes lighter in the second stint.
(Again, this is just speculation, I'm not accusing anyone).
When you have multiple teams saying you did it, it is hard to look past it. The fact that there is no evidence only means the FIA can't punish them, it can however potentially stop them from doing it again.
Just because they have other problems doesn't exclude them from being the perpetrators. Very often the bad outwieghs the good.pantherxxx wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:22It's probably a nothingburger then. The Mclaren version would have made sense. If a team could adjust ride height for real, they would have a huge advantage, and Red Bull doesn't have that.
Yet its been quiet until today. If other teams suspected it, of any other team, I imagine there would be someone to shout about it.scuderiabrandon wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:40When you have multiple teams saying you did it, it is hard to look past it. The fact that there is no evidence only means the FIA can't punish them, it can however potentially stop them from doing it again.
Who said anything about which team I support? I'm a Ferrari fan by the way. From a logical standpoint, it was Mclaren who made sudden huge performance gains this season, and not Red Bull. So in the light of this, it seems more likely that it's just an accusation against Red Bull, than a real serious thing.scuderiabrandon wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:42Just because they have other problems doesn't exclude them from being the perpetrators. Very often the bad outwieghs the good.pantherxxx wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:22It's probably a nothingburger then. The Mclaren version would have made sense. If a team could adjust ride height for real, they would have a huge advantage, and Red Bull doesn't have that.
“It only makes sense when it is not the team I support lol”
Because the exclusive article only dropped midnight yesterday, lol? Ofcourse it was quiet until today. In that article, it states discussions have been taking place since Singapore. In the same article, it states that multiple teams pointed to the same suspect.chrisc90 wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:44Yet its been quiet until today. If other teams suspected it, of any other team, I imagine there would be someone to shout about it.scuderiabrandon wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:40When you have multiple teams saying you did it, it is hard to look past it. The fact that there is no evidence only means the FIA can't punish them, it can however potentially stop them from doing it again.
You are under the assumption that they haven't been doing this the entire season. Like I said, bad development could be outweighing the gains from this, that doesn't make it a 'nothingburger' because changing stuff under parc fermé is a clear, and I mean crystal clear, breach of the regulations. In fact, we shouldn't even be discussing the effectiveness when it is straight out illegal to change stuff under parc fermé.pantherxxx wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:47Who said anything about which team I support? I'm a Ferrari fan by the way. From a logical standpoint, it was Mclaren who made sudden huge performance gains this season, and not Red Bull. So in the light of this, it seems more likely that it's just an accusation against Red Bull, than a real serious thing.scuderiabrandon wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:42Just because they have other problems doesn't exclude them from being the perpetrators. Very often the bad outwieghs the good.pantherxxx wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:22It's probably a nothingburger then. The Mclaren version would have made sense. If a team could adjust ride height for real, they would have a huge advantage, and Red Bull doesn't have that.
“It only makes sense when it is not the team I support lol”
But is this just discovered now or was it the thing that changed in Miami but only made public nowscuderiabrandon wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:52You are under the assumption that they haven't been doing this the entire season. Like I said, bad development could be outweighing the gains from this, that doesn't make it a 'nothingburger' because changing stuff under parc fermé is a clear, and I mean crystal clear, breach of the regulations. In fact, we shouldn't even be discussing the effectiveness when it is straight out illegal to change stuff under parc fermé.pantherxxx wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:47Who said anything about which team I support? I'm a Ferrari fan by the way. From a logical standpoint, it was Mclaren who made sudden huge performance gains this season, and not Red Bull. So in the light of this, it seems more likely that it's just an accusation against Red Bull, than a real serious thing.scuderiabrandon wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:42
Just because they have other problems doesn't exclude them from being the perpetrators. Very often the bad outwieghs the good.
“It only makes sense when it is not the team I support lol”
Now saying there is no evidence is the truth, there is nothing, but that only means they can't get DSQ'ed from past races. However, now that there has been light shed on it, it can stop them from doing it in future races, where you would see the effects of it given the measures put in place are sufficient at stopping them from doing it.
From autosport articleVenturiation wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:58But is this just discovered now or was it the thing that changed in Miami but only made public nowscuderiabrandon wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:52You are under the assumption that they haven't been doing this the entire season. Like I said, bad development could be outweighing the gains from this, that doesn't make it a 'nothingburger' because changing stuff under parc fermé is a clear, and I mean crystal clear, breach of the regulations. In fact, we shouldn't even be discussing the effectiveness when it is straight out illegal to change stuff under parc fermé.pantherxxx wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 19:47
Who said anything about which team I support? I'm a Ferrari fan by the way. From a logical standpoint, it was Mclaren who made sudden huge performance gains this season, and not Red Bull. So in the light of this, it seems more likely that it's just an accusation against Red Bull, than a real serious thing.
Now saying there is no evidence is the truth, there is nothing, but that only means they can't get DSQ'ed from past races. However, now that there has been light shed on it, it can stop them from doing it in future races, where you would see the effects of it given the measures put in place are sufficient at stopping them from doing it.
Read this… https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/f1-2 ... %20designs.lio007 wrote: ↑17 Oct 2024, 20:06Can anybody explain the part "...and points out all design details are uploaded to the FIA server that all teams have access to"
Do the teams really have access to designs of other teams?
https://twitter.com/redbulletin/status/ ... 02QOw&s=19