But with your postulate they should be stronger at the beginning as well, shouldn't they?
Finishing strong in the end, means having a strong basis for the new car ... right?
To my mind, RB is not developing better or faster towards the end of the season, but the others already stopped their (major) developments and started investing in the new car already.
Because if you look at recent years, RB was always catching up after Summer break considerably.
Which ... I don't know, seems to indicate something fundamentally wrong in their design schedule?
Why do you push for a better car at the end of the season, when you loose more points at the beginning of the next thus already taking yourself out of the both drivers and constructors by Summer break?
If so, why don't they adapt their time plans?
gibells wrote: ↑25 Jun 2019, 09:21Exactly Sieper. Developing next year's car is not how Newey works. He never moves on until the problems are totally addressed. My guess is they're doing a POU of their own and going to sort out their problems in a big hit. This will coincide with a newer spec motor and then they'll finish off the season strongly like last year.