Hoffman900 wrote: ↑27 Apr 2021, 15:55
tangodjango wrote: ↑27 Apr 2021, 14:35
Neno wrote: ↑27 Apr 2021, 13:04
There is literally no n fixing this year car because current car is heavily based on 2019 car which was already ultimately really flawed concept and which got Nick Chester ultimately fired from his job. Last 3 car iteration share all same chassis. And last two share exact same engine. There is no fixing it even if they wanted it. Rules dont allow it, tokens dont allow it.
And Renault, now Alpine knew that. They just didnt expect some other teams put huge resources into this year like Toro Rosso did. Which btw share last year Red Bull car concept and parts + Honda engine. And they didnt expect Ferrari to put huge resources into new power train along new car for just one year car development.
Overall Covid messed up Renault plans big time. Because they cut costs in 2019 for 2020 using same chassis for development so they can focus on 2021 new regulations, which at the end got delayed another year. Nothing else and nothing more.
Yup and irrespective of budget cap, aerodynamic knowledge they don't have now will still be aerodynamic knowledge they don't have in the future and it's not as simple as hiring some big names from other teams in the future because their knowledge might not translate well to Renault's setup and processes, on the other hand it's possible though unlikely that they might find something that other people overlook because of experience.
This.
If teams struggle in the current rules, they’ll struggle in the new. The physics that apply to the current cars will apply to the next. It’s not like teams are sitting on their hands thinking “well, I’ll try when the rules change”.
Lets see how the top 3 do with cutting their budgets in half and reducing thier staff in half and 20% less wind tunnel time than Alpine. Easy to be a aero genius when you've got 2 people for every person Alpine has doing the same job.
Once upon a time it was a big advantage having a Newey. You could pay Newey and still have double the personnel working at RBR than Alpine. Today his salary counts towards the CAP, not having a salary of $10M a year, maybe Alpine can hire 20 to 40 more staff. The great equalizer has arrived.
Whatever your experience with F1 over the last 10 years no longer applies. The playing field has changed.
New sliding scale on aerodynamic
testing in F1.
2020 2021 2022-2025
1 90% 70%
2 92.5% 75%
3 95% 80%
4 97.5% 85%
5 100% 90%
6 102.5% 95%
7 105% 100%
8 107.5% 105%
9 110% 110%
10+ 112.5% 115%
Last year, Renault finish 21 points behind Mclaren for 3ird. Most of their points came from 1 driver. That 1 driver had more points than any other driver in the midfield with the exception of Perez. If Renault would have gotten more points from their 2nd driver, they could have easily finished 3ird. So there was nothing wrong with their aero in 2020 or at least nothing more wrong than any other team in the midfield.
Again, they are only 3 points behind where they were last year after 2 races.