Red Bull Red Bull Advanced Technologies RB17


Red Bull Advanced Technologies designs and manufactures custom hypercars, including the RB17, which is a track-only vehicle. Red Bull Advanced Technologies is the high-performance engineering arm of Red Bull Racing Group. The company is based in the United Kingdom, in a dedicated facility, adjacent to the Red Bull Racing Formula One facilities. Official website: Red Bull Advanced Technologies
Ride height shouldn't be an issue thanks to its active suspension.
The standard ride height of the Valkyrie is 68 mm, in lift mode it's 93 mm (up to 15 km/h), and it can lower itself by 16 mm without and 55/64 mm (F/R) with the track pack clamshell.
The RB17's suspension should be capable of the Valkyrie's standard ride height to handle circuits with bumps and high kerbs, and it also has a lift mode. It probably uses an evolution of the same suspension rather than something completely new.
Well, ok. The ride height itself maybe isn't a massive deal. But having a separate spring rate for road use isn't so trivial. Valkyrie has absolutely massive torsion bars. I have a feeling RB17 wouldn't need such a complex, and no doubt heavy suspension (assuming it does use similar concept), if it was designed strictly as a track only vehicle. I would even go so far as to say that it wouldn't need active suspension at all.

Is the engine as fitted in the RB17 actually Euro-6-compliant, though? Because that would necessitate catalytic converters, which would very much go against what this car is about. Why did they even consider emissions at all for a track-only car?
Cosworth also say the engine life span requirement from Red Bull is 24,000 km. Not sure if that's the interval between full rebuilds, which would be incredibly good, or when the engine becomes scrap. RB themselves only mentioned the car having 8,000 km intervals for major services, but didn't specify further.

It's beginning to look like the RB17 might indeed have been developed with road conversion in mind. The semi-stressed engine, the luggage space, a Euro-6-compliant engine. Actually not a bad idea to do it this way, because the requirements for individual vehicle approval are quite lax compared to proper road homologation. Which doesn't mean making this car road legal is a good idea...
Wow, Euro 6 compliant. That's crazy!
Newey really can't help himself from overcomplicating things, can he?
Lanzante must have been in on this whole deal right from the start. That's how they were able to pull that conversion cost before anyone has even seen the production version.
 
Lanzante must have been in on this whole deal right from the start. That's how they were able to pull that conversion cost before anyone has even seen the production version.
i wanted to reply this earlier when the conversion cost was revealed, either RB has been in contact with Lanzante from the start or they've been in contact ever since any owner proposed road conversion
 
there is one thing that bugs me, the semi-stressed engine, why?

Aston Martin Valkyrie has a fully stressed engine and Aston Martin had to stop Newey from putting the driving gears of the engine in the front because of NVH concerns, yet this car which is gonna be the uncompromised car he wanted to make at Aston Martin has a semi-stressed engine
 
there is one thing that bugs me, the semi-stressed engine, why?
Bridster speculated a while back that (other than NVH) the engine might be too long / the gearbox is too far back for the structure to be stiff enough.

I think Newey is really sick of the NVH. At the beginning of Valkyrie project, he was being autistic about extreme weight saving without compromises (I remember a video where they were talking about how he didn't want any clear coat on the intake plenum, as it would weigh too much), but then he learned the hard way how annoying the sound really is and decided to never again go this route, even with a track only special.
Plus, given how the gearbox case is carbon fiber and extends into the lower portion of the subframe, I wouldn't be surprised if the whole thing was just as light as having a way stiffer engine designed as a fully stressed component and no subframes.

Aston Martin Valkyrie has a fully stressed engine and Aston Martin had to stop Newey from putting the driving gears of the engine in the front because of NVH concerns...
Oh, I'm so glad they put the gear driven valve train at the other end. Otherwise it would have been really insufferable.🤣
 
It quite baffles me that 99% of websites/videos mentioned and/or do continue to mention the downforce figure of 1700 kg at 240 km/h, even though - as far as I know - it was not directly quoted by anyone from RB/RBAT.

Newey, during his different interviews, directly mentioned the following specific numbers related to the aero characteristics of the car:

  • Downforce-to-drag ratio of 16-17:1 at relatively "low" speeds
  • Downforce being capped above certain speeds, because it simply becomes too much, leading to more negatives than benefits, like destroying the tyres. The speed at which downforce starts to be capped depends on the type of tyres fitted to the car, and the key quote here from Newey is that such value is equal to 250 km/h with the top-spec confidential Michelin tyres

Then, we have Rob Gray who was even so kind enough to go straight to the point and provide us with the exact downforce figure which the car is capable to achieve under its most extreme setup.
Yet, somehow his quote got completely ignored by the majority of people. :ROFLMAO:

Anyway, the word of the Techincal Director of RBAT is that the car is targeted to be capable of 1700 kg of downforce at 160 km/h.
Also, he explicitly confirmed that - above the chosen "capping" speed - the downforce does not reduce but it just levels off.

That is an insane figure which perfectly fits in with the downforce-to-drag efficiency ratio of 16-17:1 mentioned by Newey, and which also totally justifies why - even with the extreme confidential tyres - downforce starts to be prevented to further increase from 250 km/h onwards.
In fact, assuming that the aerodynamic efficiency and overall configuration of the car stays constant up to the "capping" velocity figure (which seems to be so listening to the information from the different interviews), this would translate into 4150 kg of downforce at 250 km/h.
An amount more than enough worthy to be capped with ANY tyre beyond that threshold, because obviously downforce goes with the square of velocity and you wouldn't want to discover what could happen to the chassis/tyres beyond 300+ km/h.

Finally, just to give a bit more context to how insane all of this is: the monstrous Eagle MKIII (my avatar BTW) - probably one of the top 5 race cars ever in terms of amount of generated downforce (F1 included) - at the top of its development and in its max downforce setting was capable of generating around 4200 kg of negative lift at 322 km/h, with a quoted downforce-to-drag ratio of 4.42:1..

The RB17 is just INSANE and for sure the most advanced car ever conceived in terms of aerodynamics.

Now all is left for Newey is to deliver, no more excuses this time: him and his RBAT team obviously have the know-how (about him, well it's obvious and the RB are the best race team in the world), the capabilities, the technology and the resources to pull this off.
I can't wait to see this car being completed and I can't especially wait for it to properly deliver as it is being promised by its announced specs.
 
It quite baffles me that 99% of websites/videos mentioned and/or do continue to mention the downforce figure of 1700 kg at 240 km/h, even though - as far as I know - it was not directly quoted by anyone from RB/RBAT.
But that's literally what Mr. Newey said himself! Who am I supposed to believe if not him?

AN on RBR podcast:
"As a number, its downforce is capped at 1.7 tons. So downforce is capped at almost twice its weight. And that's simply because otherwise you overload the tires.
But it actually gets to that figure... it's about 150 mph. So after that it starts to bleed off.
It can actually produce its own weight in downforce at 120 mph."
Adrian Newey:
875 kg @ 120 mph (193 kph) = 1,353 kg @ 240 kph
1,700 kg @ 150 mph (241 kph)

Rob Gray:
1,700 kg at 160 kph = 3,825 kg at 240 kph

So basically when Newey said that the car produces its own weight in downforce at 120 mph, what he really meant was that it makes almost three! times its weight... :unsure:

I get that there is probably a lot of variation in these numbers given the complex nature of the car. There's active suspension affecting ride height, blown diffuser and fans. And who knows under what conditions they all contribute or don't contribute to the overall downforce. But the disparity between these two main claims is too great. One of them probably is giving wrong/outdated/cherrypicked stat.

In fact, assuming that the aerodynamic efficiency and overall configuration of the car stays constant up to the "capping" velocity figure (which seems to be so listening to the information from the different interviews), this would translate into 4150 kg of downforce at 250 km/h.
...
Finally, just to give a bit more context to how insane all of this is: the monstrous Eagle MKIII (my avatar BTW) - probably one of the top 5 race cars ever in terms of amount of generated downforce (F1 included) - at the top of its development and in its max downforce setting was capable of generating around 4200 kg of negative lift at 322 km/h, with a quoted downforce-to-drag ratio of 4.42:1..
Sorry, but I'm not buying that RB17 is even bigger downforce freak than this monstrosity...
1721469830412.jpg


...or those crazy IMSA cars with ultra high downforce street circuit aero setups, like the Toyota Eagle GTP MkIII that you mentioned.
Or Pikes Peak specials, which squeeze every possible ounce of downforce out of their footprint, because of how vital it is due to lower air density at high altitude.

I'm gonna get called silly for eye balling downforce levels... but to me, RB17 doesn't look like it's making three times the downforce of unlimited Valkyrie.

Even those Adamastor guys only quote 1,800 kg at 250 kph for their competition version of Furia. 4,150 kg is outrageous amount. Sorry, but I don't believe it.
 
@Revvd

I do agree that there is a disparity between claims, but such disparity is only between old ones (pre-car reveal) and new ones (post-reveal).
I do remember very well about numbers which were hinted during the last couple of years through podcasts or short interviews here and there, and honestly they always did seem to me like some kind of temporary placeholders to give to the media/public to make them happy.

If you just listen to both Newey and Gray after the RB17 reveal, there is no disparity between their claims.
In fact, Newey never mentioned downforce numbers once, focusing instead on L/D efficiency and giving us the 250 km/h mark as velocity limit of confidential tyres for downforce leveling.
On the other hand, Gray did provide the 1700 kg at 160 km/h downforce quote straight away, also basically confirming it twice during his latest interview.

My personal opinion on all of this is that 1700 kg of downforce at 241 km/h would simply not provide the RB17 with a downforce-to-weight ratio (which is what ultimately matters) good enough to match modern F1 lap times.
In absolute terms, the figure itself would be quite high even for race car standards, as it would for example match the downforce of 2017 DTM machines (which were at their peak before they got clipped later on), but there are many race cars in history which matched and exceeded that number.
So, unregulated groundbraking aerodynamics, a 16-17:1 L/D ratio, ground-effect with sealing skirts, a blown diffuser with active fans and F1-banned active suspensions, all of this would be employed just to get to downforce numbers that a 2017 DTM race car was already displaying, at a fraction of the costs and required resources?
Sorry, but this does not frankly add up to me.

Even more, let's play the reverse game and let's assume that somehow that previous quote of 1700 kg of downforce at 241 km/h is true, along with the L/D efficiency of 16.
A quick calc would show that the car would achieve a drag SCx coefficient of around 0.38, which is an absurdly low figure for a car with any form of wings, even if extremely optimized in terms of efficiency like these ones. Instead, going by the claim of Rob Gray (1700 kg at 160 km/h), we would get a much more realistic and credible drag SCx coefficient of around 0.9.
To give even more context, WEC LMH machines are said to have L/D capped to a 4:1 ratio.
By knowing few downforce figures of some of the LMH cars here and there, we can calculate a drag SCx coefficient which would usually fall into the 0.95-1 range.
So, even here I'd say that things would simply not add up if we go by that presumed 241 km/h downforce claim.

Moreover, back to the RB17 being capable of matching F1 lap times, it was mentioned by Newey at Goodwood that Red Bull Racing DIL simulations demonstrated that the RB17 could have taken pole this year at Silverstone with around 1 second of margin over the lead time of George Russell.
DIL simulators are not a game, but extremely complex numerical loops that F1 teams use to prepare themselves for a race weekend and have an as accurate as possible prediction of expected qualifying and race lap times.
Well - if true - such claimed one second faster lap time than the 2024 F1 pole position would basically put the RB17 straight away into qualifying-trim Mercedes W11 territory.
And the W11 is probably the fastest F1 car of all times.

To me, no matter how low the drag, the power-to-weight ratio, the active suspensions and everything else, I believe that 1700 kg at 241 km/h would just simply not give the RB17 the necessary downforce-to-weight ratio to reach such promised performance level.
So yeah - also for all of these reasons - I am personally going to believe into the latest downforce claim from Rob Gray (i.e. 1700 kg at 160 km/h), until definitely proven otherwise with solid data and evidence.

More in general regarding how negative lift is generated, the Time Attack car that you mentioned achieves the vast majority of its downforce by means of insane front and rear wings.
But in the end, downforce is just force [N] obtained from pressure [N/m2]*Area [m2], so simply put you have two ways to increase it: by increasing pressure (on the external wing) or negative pressure/suction (for ground effect) and by increasing the available surface area.
So it's not so straightforward to estimate downforce numbers just by visual comparison.
In fact, the diffuser of a fully ground-effect car can provide a much higher surface area even compared to huge wings of a "traditional" downforce car, hence in the end downforce figures between the two cars could be comparable still.

In particular, the latest version of the Time Attack R8 1:1 (picture below) generates an enormous downforce value of 4800 kg at 290 km/h, obviously mainly thanks to its huge wings.
However, already back in 1979 the Williams FW07 full ground-effect F1 car (see second picture) was quoted to be capable of downforce levels of 2278 kg at 241 km/h.
Just by the mere look of it, would you even say that a 1979 F1 car with such relatively small wings could be capable of such incredible numbers? That's the magic of a race car with its chassis developed from scratch with full ground-effect aero in mind, as majority of the downforce comes from the underbody and not the wings.

R8-specs-kuva-1536x1024.jpg


iams_FW07C%2C_Peter_Sowerby%2C_GB_%2817.06.2007%29.jpg


And we are talking 1979 here, this is almost "prehistoric" level of engineering and technology compared to what it can be employed on the RB17, especially without any regulation and constraint.

Regarding the Adamastor Furia: I do really appreciate that car and it surely boast interesting downforce figures in race trim. However, with all due respect, are we really comparing it to the RB17?
Come on, it's a no contest in terms of performance targets, applied technology and costs.

On the contrary, the fact that even the Furia can achieve 1800 kg at 250 km/h without blown/active diffuser, outright banned F1-tech, active sealing skirts, active suspensions and bespoke multi-million confidential slick tyres, should once more tell us that such 1700 kg @241 km/h downforce claim for the RB17 should be - IMHO - viewed as an underestimation.
 
I would be inclined to believe the claim, if it wasn't the highest downforce number that I know of. That Audi is also up there, but the Red Bull has a very comfortable margin over everything else.

Someone help me understand how RBR went from a fairly conservative number to an outrageous one (2.2x greater value) within 5 months. That's how long ago they aired that RBR podcast episode, where that Newey quote originates.
I get that the concept evolved over time, but keep in mind the blue car is already the second evolution of the original concept. The third (and final) evolution, which remains to be seen, is presumably what these new stats pertain to, only came about this year. I would think that at that stage, you just fine tune things, instead of going ham with aero all of a sudden.

Such a radical revision of the car, wasted on (now) outdated specification of your bespoke slicks, that Michelin has presumably been developing this whole time. OK, granted, now you have unparalleled low speed grip, but the downforce cap stays the same, you just hit it 80 kph sooner.

And does this mean that the previous RB17 version fell way short of RBR's performance target?

It feels like the way Newey does passenger cars is as follows:
Time for the ultimate car! - Hmmm, that didn't turn out the way I pictured.
Let's add a track pack! - Never mind. Better forget about it.
OK, this one is will be ultimate, tho. - Wait a minute, that's still not good enough.
Still not quite there.
>>[you are here]<<
This next one will be it, you just wait!
...
I agree that the old claim is suspiciously low. They both are suspect, at the opposite ends of the spectrum. At this point I'm expecting the final version to get back to reality, so to speak, and land somewhere in the middle. 😁

Some of these ground effect cars are very deceptive. Take NIO EP9, for example. They also quote some crazy high numbers for that. But then, that car never lived up to its stats, only inviting skepticism regarding their claims. Maybe this makes me skeptical about the entire aero concept.
 
@Revvd

Yeah I agree, these for now are all claims and we have just to wait and see what will actually come out in terms of final numbers.
As they say, track and stopwatch will be the masters in the end, as always.
 
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Max has certainly expressed interest in having a car himself. Checho might do, we're not quite sure. There's another current Formula 1 driver who's having a car.

Interesting stuff. I really wonder how many (ex) professional drivers are getting one.

I know this will never happen but a racing series similar to the Jaguar XJR-15 would be amazing to watch.
 
Here's some interesting RB17 bits from Top Gear UK 09-2024:
“You need a platform the active systems can work against,” explains RBAT boss Rob Gray. “We ran a lot of simulations to determine the minimal stiffness that still gave a good response on the active suspension system. We did find there’s a point where it falls off a cliff. We’re definitely ahead of that point. We could have made the car stiffer but it wouldn’t have gone any faster. We got to a level that gave us the handling characteristics we wanted, beyond which extra stiffness just meant excess weight.”
Safety is also a vital component. The RB17 takes its cues here from LMH regulations, in terms of structural integrity but also in what’s called the ‘overturning moment’. In essence, it shouldn’t suffer from such an acute degree of lift in the event of an accident or impact that it becomes fully airborne (see YouTube for examples of endurance racing cars doing this). The team has managed to comply with these restrictions without destroying the styling. Newey is passionate that the RB17 looks beautiful, for all that it’s aero driven.

...The process here is compelling. Newey drew the aerodynamic surfaces, as ever by hand, which were transferred into CFD in order to visualise the air flow and understand the loads that were being generated. At that point, Red Bull hired a couple of RCA automotive design graduates to flesh out the surfaces, before submitting their proposals for more CFD analysis. If downforce points were lost during the styling process, the aero guys could suggest ways of recovering them. These loops would continue until everyone was happy, an iterative process that would obviously never happen in F1.

...Question is, how do you make something capable of delivering contemporary F1 lap times accessible to mere mortals? The active suspension is key here, as is a graduated traction control system and a range of chassis modes. Their parameters are still being configured, but Newey is clearly chuffed that active suspension is back in play. “It allows you to change the mechanical balance and your stability margin,” he explains. “Combined with the car’s active aero surfaces it allows you to change the centre of pressure [the ratio of front downforce versus rear downforce], which is quite far forwards in any case. And we will have knobs in the cockpit that allow you to do that on the fly, so you can have more stability on the entry to a low speed corner or more stability at the apex of a high speed one... it gives us tremendous flexibility.”

And what of the tyres, perhaps the limiting factor when it comes to such vast aero forces? Red Bull is working with Michelin on three different compounds. The most extreme tyre is the ‘confidential’, which is a bit peaky but offers huge grip. The standard slick serves up more slip angle and is less temperature sensitive, and there will also be a treaded option. On the subject of slip angles, you’re looking in the wrong place if it’s powersliding you’re after. “Absolutely not,” Newey says firmly. “I do not want to see any photos with all that going on. I know that’s what you love but it leaves me cold. It’s just showboating, isn’t it?”

...lessons have been learned from the painfully loud Valkyrie, so the V10 is a semi-stressed member rather than being bolted directly to the chassis. Compliantly mounting the engine added weight but it was a price worth paying. The RB17 also has to meet the noise regulations of as many circuits as possible, and should be hitting no more than 105db. The exhaust is a 10 into one setup, inspired by the Newey designed 2000 McLaren MP4/15, a car he cites as the best sounding F1 car of all. Its steering is fully hydraulic, and very similar to an F1 car’s, in that it uses a mechanical spring to sense the amount of torque the driver is putting in, before opening a hydraulic valve to feed fluid either way.

and evo UK 09-2024:
'The Valkyrie was a very compressed timeframe from when we had to have the first concept drawings to when we had to release detailed drawings,' explains Newey, the outgoing chief technical officer of Red Bull. 'In hindsight it was a bit too compressed: The timeframe adopted by Red Bull Advanced Technologies, the division responsible for the project, allowed Newey and technical director Rob Gray to evaluate three different powertrain configurations - a V6 or VB turbocharged hybrid, and the Cosworth 4.4-litre 1/10 hybrid eventually settled on - and to explore whether the electric motor should be located on the front or rear axle. 'There's been a lot of evolution between our first design and what you see today,' continues Newey, speaking after the car's unveiling at Goodwood. 'There's been a lot of checking and double-checking that we had the correct packaging on the car will be relatively easy to work on. These were all lessons learned from the Valkyrie.

...Low weight was a priority objective for the project. At under 900kg the RB17 is on a par with GMA's T50, and the lengths that have been taken to keep weight to a minimum without compromising useability are equally impressive. The V10 weighs 150kg, but 15kg was sacrificed by using rubber engine mounts to reduce cabin noise, thus preventing the need for ear defenders when driving, another Valkyrie learning. The weight can increase depending on the final spec each of the 50 customers opts for. No HVAC system and a straight-through exhaust is the lightest configuration, but the car has been designed so these components can be bolted in and out depending on where the customer intends to drive the car and the regs in force.

...The V10 has been designed to run for 24 hours without pause: 'It would be great to see it run at Le Mans': says Homer when asked if Red Bull has any desire to expand into endurance racing. Service intervals will be 5000 miles and the RB17 can run on pump fuel. And the cost? £5.75m plus local taxes. Or roughly a tenth of Max's yearly pay.

Regarding to downforce numbers, both articles quote the 1700 kg peak and bleeding point of 150 mph.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Here's a better picture of the chassis.
chassis.webp
 
Chassis comparison with the artwork from carwow video.
While there are difference between them, as you can see, it's not any shorter than the other render, so this is not the final version.
chassis_carwow.jpg


chassis_tg.jpg


Now that I'm looking at it, I just noticed what looks like asymmetrical monocoque reinforcement on the driver's side (on TG's render). 🧐
 
Asked about challenges whilst making RB17 road legal:
1723924536474.jpg

"Well, I can't comment because it's a track car. What people do with it afterwards is up to them. It's out of your control."
...he answers, wearing a Lanzante t-shirt, having designed the car with optional road wheel and tire option, luggage compartments, flexible engine mounts and Euro6 compliance.

BTW, he does repeat the stuff about reducing downforce "above 150 mph", "around 250 kph" here. You'd think by now he'd be up to date with Rob Gray's bleeding point of 100 mph. 🤔
 
Asked about challenges whilst making RB17 road legal:
1723924536474.jpg


...he answers, wearing a Lanzante t-shirt, having designed the car with optional road wheel and tire option, luggage compartments, flexible engine mounts and Euro6 compliance.

BTW, he does repeat the stuff about reducing downforce "above 150 mph", "around 250 kph" here. You'd think by now he'd be up to date with Rob Gray's bleeding point of 100 mph. 🤔
Which matches well with this report:
 
BTW, he does repeat the stuff about reducing downforce "above 150 mph", "around 250 kph" here. You'd think by now he'd be up to date with Rob Gray's bleeding point of 100 mph. 🤔

But Rob Gray did not explicitly state that 100 mph is the absolute bleeding threshold for downforce.
He said that, in its maximum downforce configuration (so, aero efficiency pushed to 16), the RB17 is capabable of generating 1700 kg of downforce at around 100 mph.
Then he basically added that it comes a point above that speed where they don't want any more downforce to not overload the tyres, so the downforce just levels off thanks to active aero features and the active diffuser.

That specific speed point represents the bleeding threshold and - this is the really important bit to understand - it is a variable mark because it depends on the adopted tyres.
With the confidential slick tyres that point is stated to be around 250 km/h, as it was mentioned by Newey also during this latest podcast.
It is under these conditions that the RB17 should be able to achieve its claimed F1-beating performance.

Without the confidential tyres, even under full downforce setup (1700 kg at around 100 mph according to Gray), F1 lap times cannot be achieved because the bleeding threshold gets considerably lower than the 250 km/h mark, since the non-confidential tyres would get overloaded far earlier by the combination of car weight and downforce.

In fact, this was mostly sated even here, as reported in one of your previous posts:


Finally, there is to me a very important piece of information that we can extract from this latest podcast with Newey: the claimed DIL simulator lap time at Silverstone supposedly 1 second faster than this year pole position was apparently achieved by an amateur driver.
That would be quite incredible because the gap in performance between an albeit very good amateur driver and a Max Verstappen can easily be in the order of seconds per lap.

This is huge level of performance and there is no escape from the fact that, if the RB17 will truly possess this capability in real life (and that's a very big promise in terms of potential), it is really going to need every ounce of efficient downforce it can possibly extract from those confidential slicks.
 
Article from Road & Track Volume 28 (Edge)
(no new photos)
  • weight target remains bellow 900 kg
  • turn-key experience without external diagnostics or starters
  • motor will run on pump gas (higher octane# fuels bring performance advantage)
  • high-voltage fans blowing air through diffusers are one of the biggest draws of el. power on the car
  • they've added a second element to the rear wing, turning it into an active aero device
  • CFD aero map not yet validated in wind tunnel
  • Rob Gray admits their public downforce claims are "very loose targets" as they are mainly focused on lap times rather than headline numbers
  • priority on as much downforce at low speed for good traction and drivability for lower-level drivers
  • the car is six seconds faster on Spa Francorchamps with confidential slicks vs regular slicks
    ^ two seconds of that is down to grippier compound alone
    ^ the other four seconds are due to confidential tire's ability to take much bigger aero loads
  • this margin also means RB17 on confidentials beats F1 lap records, while its pace on slicks nearly matches that of F1 race pace
  • 5g lateral and longitudinal (under braking) peak acceleration
  • each RB17 comes with brake lights, turn signals and rearview mirrors
  • small number of build slots still left
  • no chance of RBR doing a B-spec RB17
 

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