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Post by wilmywood8455 on Sept 11, 2023 7:27:37 GMT -8
The Red Bull RB19 has now equalled the record for consecutive Grand Prix victories held by the 2013 Red Bull RB9 and the 1952-53 Ferrari 500. A victory in Singapore would mean the RB19 having scored more consecutive wins than any other single model in the sport’s history.The record-breaking run of 15 team victories set at Monza last week was initiated by last year’s RB18 model. Last week, we looked at the packaging differences between the two cars which look so similar externally but which are completely different under the skin. This time we can see from the two Giorgio Piola drawings below another crucial distinction, one which could well be right at the core of the RB19’s big performance upgrade over its predecessor and perhaps one which will be widely followed by rivals next year: the chassis is of a completely different section – no longer flat and square-edged but much more vee-shaped. This profile carries back through the entire length of the chassis, creating space for more aggressively shaped underfloor tunnels to deliver greater downforce.
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Post by wilmywood8455 on Sept 11, 2023 7:30:51 GMT -8
I love these questions they ask, but they always miss the main reason Red Bull is so much faster year after year ...
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