JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Perhaps if you had the forethought to actually see that Mercedes/Brawn had the DDD in 2009 but not the flexi wing in 2010 and Red Bull vice versa, you would see that perhaps Red Bull doesnt have this fabled "2 year head start".
I stated that Red Bull have a two year head start with the pull-rod suspension, and with the rear of their car in general since their single diffuser was the fastest thing out there when we last had one. God knows how what you've stated there tells us that Red Bull doesn't have a reasonable lead. What is required for 2011 they started doing two years ago. That's pretty much it.
The difference lies in suspension. And who did Mercedes recently employ....
The stuff you've talked about above is aerodynamics, where this team has fouled up rather a lot, so what they really need is......someone who can make suspensions. It gets better.
With the pull rod they have a head start, but it is actually not as advanced as the pushrod according to engineering mechanics.
These are the same people who told is at the beginning of 2010 that Red Bull would dispense with that suspension layout and the biggest area of development would be in strapping the biggest diffuser imaginable to the back of the car with as many holes as you could get away with? Uh, huh.
...its not exactly a paradigm shift when you have studied it for 2 years now is it?
Who has studied what? I'm afraid you don't look at a car for two years and find out it's secrets. Unless Mercedes's new engineer was employed by Red Bull at some point in the past two years and he can tell them what aerodynamic benefit the suspension brings then he isn't going to give them a lot. The pull-rod layout exists for aerodynamic benefits first. It's not the suspension itself.