Simple answer - They'll bring the fight to Red Bull and we'll get an even more intense title fight. Newey probably has upgrades planned to respond to Mercedes. I think the more complex question is - does this upgrade improve Mercedes qualifying pace and race pace or just the race pace ? Or was it track specific to Silverstone ?Restomaniac wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 10:39Right if we put the actual crash in a box another question appears. Mercedes have just found pace after an upgrade they really didn't have time to validate and tune in before the races and qualifying. What happens when they do?
Remember Mercedes have gone from one of the slowest in a straight line in Austria to the fastest in Britain due to being able to remove the barn door at the back of the car.
Though at some point both teams will have to fully commit resources to the 2022 cars. No point throwing everything at this season's title fight, when you might then hobble yourself for 2022 and beyond, having to play catchup with a cost cap in place. It's a delicate balancing act.
As for tuning an upgrade ? I guess it depends on how it alters the performance of the car, it might need some simple tweaks or it might need extensive changes. Most of which they can model in the simulator, then correlate that with on track data. Mercedes have got race data to look at before the next race, so I'd guess the eagle eyed amongst us will be looking for subtle or big changes on the Mercedes, and Red Bull also in case they've got updates as well.