I think so too. I hope so at least. Just a few extra nylon mesh layers, or even just a few woven in strings at the boundary between thread and shoulder. I don’t know what it takes but their engineers will know the forces at play.
I think so too. I hope so at least. Just a few extra nylon mesh layers, or even just a few woven in strings at the boundary between thread and shoulder. I don’t know what it takes but their engineers will know the forces at play.
A lot will depend on what they do to the tire. If they make the sidewall tougher without changing it's stiffness then it won't have much effect.
Or Pirelli knew that their tires are s**t, and they prepared better ones. And they just wait for opportunity to introduce them...
Not if they're sliding because they can't get them to hook up!
ALL of the teams are playing the all of the regulations (that is where the “unfair advantage” is achieved!!). This is caused by the way that the rules are framed, I wouldn’t mind betting that the highest achieving teams employ people whose sole job is to read (and re-read) the rules to see how they can gain advantage from interpretation and loopholes…Starkblood80 wrote: ↑25 Jun 2021, 20:33Perhaps if Redbull stopped trying to cheat the regulations then these things wouldn’t need to be “nerfed”.
Absolutely- and this is what gets completely lost in tribalism and subjectivity- they are ALL at it. We are talking teams of genius engineers here with the goal of pushing the envelope as far as possible without falling foul of the rules and regs. It's like a high stakes poker game. Win big with an idea that sticks, or get taken to the cleaners by one that gets taken away.Stu wrote: ↑28 Jun 2021, 08:59ALL of the teams are playing the all of the regulations (that is where the “unfair advantage” is achieved!!). This is caused by the way that the rules are framed, I wouldn’t mind betting that the highest achieving teams employ people whose sole job is to read (and re-read) the rules to see how they can gain advantage from interpretation and loopholes…Starkblood80 wrote: ↑25 Jun 2021, 20:33Perhaps if Redbull stopped trying to cheat the regulations then these things wouldn’t need to be “nerfed”.
Loopholes is a really unfortunate term as it has negative connotations!
I think nothing should be banned (like DAS, TMD, etc). If those things are deemed unfair, they should just have to share the tech to keep it on their car. No sense wasting effort and engineering brilliance.El Scorchio wrote: ↑28 Jun 2021, 12:00Absolutely- and this is what gets completely lost in tribalism and subjectivity- they are ALL at it. We are talking teams of genius engineers here with the goal of pushing the envelope as far as possible without falling foul of the rules and regs. It's like a high stakes poker game. Win big with an idea that sticks, or get taken to the cleaners by one that gets taken away.Stu wrote: ↑28 Jun 2021, 08:59ALL of the teams are playing the all of the regulations (that is where the “unfair advantage” is achieved!!). This is caused by the way that the rules are framed, I wouldn’t mind betting that the highest achieving teams employ people whose sole job is to read (and re-read) the rules to see how they can gain advantage from interpretation and loopholes…Starkblood80 wrote: ↑25 Jun 2021, 20:33
Perhaps if Redbull stopped trying to cheat the regulations then these things wouldn’t need to be “nerfed”.
Loopholes is a really unfortunate term as it has negative connotations!
MB, RBR and Ferrari are at it the most, simply because they have the most brain and people power to work on these things as well as doing all the other things necessary to get a car on the road. The other teams with less can't dedicate as much to, let's call it 'genius innovation' so it happens on other cars less often. I don't doubt they have some killer ideas, but just not the time and resource to execute them.
DAS, flexing wings, blown diffusers should all be applauded as fabulous engineering ideas, and we should be able to separate that from the process of the regs catching up to them and eventually getting them written out as solutions without just crying 'cheat' at the ones which aren't on the cars we want them to be on.
I can't agree with that. The teams should be able to keep their secrets to themselves. Maybe share with the FIA if necessary for clarity but never to be forced to share with the other teams. That's just another step toward making it a spec series.Zynerji wrote: ↑28 Jun 2021, 16:53I think nothing should be banned (like DAS, TMD, etc). If those things are deemed unfair, they should just have to share the tech to keep it on their car. No sense wasting effort and engineering brilliance.El Scorchio wrote: ↑28 Jun 2021, 12:00Absolutely- and this is what gets completely lost in tribalism and subjectivity- they are ALL at it. We are talking teams of genius engineers here with the goal of pushing the envelope as far as possible without falling foul of the rules and regs. It's like a high stakes poker game. Win big with an idea that sticks, or get taken to the cleaners by one that gets taken away.Stu wrote: ↑28 Jun 2021, 08:59
ALL of the teams are playing the all of the regulations (that is where the “unfair advantage” is achieved!!). This is caused by the way that the rules are framed, I wouldn’t mind betting that the highest achieving teams employ people whose sole job is to read (and re-read) the rules to see how they can gain advantage from interpretation and loopholes…
Loopholes is a really unfortunate term as it has negative connotations!
MB, RBR and Ferrari are at it the most, simply because they have the most brain and people power to work on these things as well as doing all the other things necessary to get a car on the road. The other teams with less can't dedicate as much to, let's call it 'genius innovation' so it happens on other cars less often. I don't doubt they have some killer ideas, but just not the time and resource to execute them.
DAS, flexing wings, blown diffusers should all be applauded as fabulous engineering ideas, and we should be able to separate that from the process of the regs catching up to them and eventually getting them written out as solutions without just crying 'cheat' at the ones which aren't on the cars we want them to be on.
Better to penalize through sharing than shelving.
I think that is exactly what happened with the Ferrari engine last year. The rule changes around fuel use:throttle suggests that rather than storing excess fuel (and then cooling it?) that was bandied about, when they were actually burning fuel disproportionately to the throttle position to charge the MGUh, enabling an electrical boost in traction zones. Which is a clever ‘solution’ (that WAS legal!), it also explains why they suffered so much when the NEW rules were applied…El Scorchio wrote: ↑28 Jun 2021, 17:47I can't agree with that. The teams should be able to keep their secrets to themselves. Maybe share with the FIA if necessary for clarity but never to be forced to share with the other teams. That's just another step toward making it a spec series.Zynerji wrote: ↑28 Jun 2021, 16:53I think nothing should be banned (like DAS, TMD, etc). If those things are deemed unfair, they should just have to share the tech to keep it on their car. No sense wasting effort and engineering brilliance.El Scorchio wrote: ↑28 Jun 2021, 12:00
Absolutely- and this is what gets completely lost in tribalism and subjectivity- they are ALL at it. We are talking teams of genius engineers here with the goal of pushing the envelope as far as possible without falling foul of the rules and regs. It's like a high stakes poker game. Win big with an idea that sticks, or get taken to the cleaners by one that gets taken away.
MB, RBR and Ferrari are at it the most, simply because they have the most brain and people power to work on these things as well as doing all the other things necessary to get a car on the road. The other teams with less can't dedicate as much to, let's call it 'genius innovation' so it happens on other cars less often. I don't doubt they have some killer ideas, but just not the time and resource to execute them.
DAS, flexing wings, blown diffusers should all be applauded as fabulous engineering ideas, and we should be able to separate that from the process of the regs catching up to them and eventually getting them written out as solutions without just crying 'cheat' at the ones which aren't on the cars we want them to be on.
Better to penalize through sharing than shelving.