LM10 wrote: ↑04 Mar 2021, 16:44
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑04 Mar 2021, 16:01
LM10 wrote: ↑04 Mar 2021, 15:31
I agree with you on the part that the field will be much closer everywhere and that's also what makes me quite excited about the upcoming season.
RedBull seems to be serious with their car with all the effort they put in trying to hide it. Same goes for Mercedes trying to hide the floor area and making a secret out of where they spent their tokens on. I think that this time we finally will see some kind of a title fight until the enb. I not only think, but hope it of course. In the first place because I don't want to see a Mercedes domination again and secondly because I want both teams to fight it out and make them shift focus on 2022 later than Ferrari.
As for the midfield I think that it will be even closer than last season. I feel Ferrari will have problems beating the Aston Martin which looks like a complete package consisting of some Mercedes goodness yet again. At the end I'm predicting the Aston Martin to be on 3rd place with Ferrari behind, but not by that much. Of course it will also be up to in-season development and Binotto has already told that they will put almost no development into the 2021 car and instead focus on 2022.
If you're hoping for a distraction from the 2022 cars, I would point out that Mercedes designed two cars a couple of years ago, tested one and then raced the other. If any team can fully campaign in 2021 and design for 2022 at the same time, it's them.
I'm also excited about the season. I think it will be a lot closer than it has been for a while - early 2018 close, for example. I can see Lewis and Max fighting it out and someone else sneaking through behind them. Wouldn't that be an interesting season?
They tested a car in the first week and then got a big upgrade package for the second week as far as I remember. I doubt it was two cars designed at the same time rather than upgrades which were fully ready only in the second half of testing.
. . . the cost cap . . .
In 2019, the car that Mercedes rolled out in the first week of testing was a specification that had been "frozen" a few months prior to the start of the season.
They had been developing the car/package that they brought to the second week of testing concurrently with that spec. That was the year the front wing regulations changed. It was a monumental task for Mercedes to adapt, because they had the most complicated FW in the paddock prior to '19. It featured a really intricate set of outwash tunnels built into the outboard section of the FW flaps, among other features.
Regarding the cost cap, Mercedes has said that they've found new ways to be more efficient with their resources (financial, wind tunnel, CFD, etc.), which has in turn given them a performance boost. They also launched the Applied Sciences Division of the team with INEOS, which is a clever way to adapt to the cap.
In sum, I definitely think the cost cap is going to relieve some pressure on some of the midfield teams, but I'm not expecting it to rattle a team like Merc. They'll find a way to make it work to their advantage.