SiLo wrote: ↑18 Jun 2024, 14:21
Funny that they are complaining about the thing they have probably been best on the grid at doing for years. The RB wing still moves, maybe a tad less but there is still a good amount of flex there. Wouldn't surprise me if this is just some standard F1 politics.
It makes sense if you think about it.
RedBull had lot of diplomatic trouble over flexi wings during the last 10 years and also it is an advantage that is easy to lose over a TD. So no wonder they did not want to open this can of worms while having a comfortable advantage over the competition so they didn't develop into this direction. They could gain enough so far by fiddling with the floor.
It is also understandable from the other team's perspective who were more desperate to gain performance and also had less to lose so they started developing the good-old flexi concepts.
Now Red Bull would like to check with FIA whether the game is really on before allocating resources into that direction.
I guess they would be happier if this would be closed now as probably there are no long-term potential in this, knowing that active aero is coming in 2026. So they would need to develop a solution for 1 - 1.5 years max.