dtro wrote: β25 Jan 2020, 20:07
zibby43 wrote: β24 Jan 2020, 07:36
dtro wrote: β24 Jan 2020, 00:35
Does anyone actually believe a word coming out of the media's proverbial mouths in re: Ferrari's car this year?
. . . do we really need to buy into the nonsense we're being fed? We'll see we're they're at.
I think this is a very fair point. All the leaks need to be taken with a grain of salt.
The interesting thing is that Leo Turrini provided similar information (re: disappointing simulations) a few weeks ago. He's an award-winning Italian journalist that has unprecedented access to Ferrari (compared to most other journalists).
Ferrari has struggled with quickly addressing and recovering from aero/chassis issues in recent years (something the new simulator is supposed to help rectify). There was the 2018 Singapore update that made the car slower. This year, it took until Singapore of 2019 to try to add downforce to the car, which seemed to help over a single lap, but in the waning races, the car's race pace was still nowhere.
I'm expecting the '20 Red Bull and Mercedes cars to be strong evolutions of their 2019 predecessors. Especially with the new regulations coming out in '21. Ferrari, on the other hand, needs to make some fairly substantial changes on their '20 challenger, as they absolutely have to get more balanced downforce on the car (especially if the PU advantage won't be as strong in '20, as that won't be able to potentiate the distinctively low-drag package that Ferrari chose in '19).
Still, it's all speculation right now. Just like you said.
Thank you for the cogent response. I've heard that Turrini is closer to an insider than most journalists, I just don't understand why any racing team would want to air their dirty laundry, especially right before the beginning of the season, making me think that this is a disinformation campaign moreso than a genuine appraisal of the state of this year's car.
I do recall how many of Ferrari's updates to the aero/chassis in the last couple of years haven't brought the level of improvement fans/the team anticipated, and in light of the fact that Merc/RB will likely be evolving their designs. I am concerned that Ferrari will be taking a revolutionary approach, but time will tell.
I agree. IMHO, there can only be 2 possibilities as to why information like this would leak from inside the team.
Disinformation (which you pointed out above) is certainly a possibility. The counter-argument to that would be, what purpose would it serve? Teams aren't going to back off their development based on what others are doing, particularly this early in the game.
Or would they? After 2019, I remember Ferrari finally admitting that they thought they were about 0.5s ahead of Mercedes after pre-season testing concluded. I don't think Ferrari necessarily rested on their laurels until Melbourne, but did they maybe not want to "mess" (for lack of a better word) with the car if they thought the initial advantage was that great?
Possibility 2 is tamping down expectations for a rabid fan base because the team aren't quite sure what they have with the '20 car, after having to make some fairly substantial changes to the platform.
Or, it could be neither of these, and a passing comment made to Turrini along the lines of "We're not where we want to be yet" has been blown out of proportion because we're all thirsty for some F1 right about now.