This piece of jargon decides F1's winners and losers, but the meaning behind the term is surprisingly human.
So concepts become an arms race between F1 teams to establish a daring baseline, then develop the car around that concept, with total faith that the ideas behind that concept will come good. But rather than give up entirely on the concept, Mercedes doubled down for this year's W14, mitigating porpoising with a reinforced floor section and hedging the extreme aero approach with slightly more bulbous sidepods, in hopes that the long-term vision would come good. Mercedes’s Zero-Pod concept is an example of the latter. Drastically shrunken sidepods created room for an ultra-wide floor on the car, leveraging far more surface area on the top side of the aero package than any other design on the grid. Take, for example, the concept concerning most modern pundits: Mercedes’s “Zero Pod” design, which premiered on last year's W13 chassis. In just its fourth race, the 1976 Swedish Grand Prix Jody Sheckter put the P34 on pole and led a Tyrrell one-two finish. Optimizing that relationship between drag and downforce remains the central challenge for F1 designers. Pick a bad concept—even for a single year—and it’s enough to torpedo your season. Pick a good concept for your F1 car; you’re immediately competitive, one of few teams able to fight for a championship. In some cases, when a huge rule change shakes up the known formula for success in F1, a bad concept can bring about dramatic failure. That decreased frontal area would in turn reduce drag on the car. Formula 1’s ecosystem of pundits and commenters have recently latched on to “concepts” as a major topic of discussion.
Some of the most famous chronographs we have today, like the Rolex Daytona, the TAG Heuer Carrera or Monaco have their roots in motorsports.
The Bell & Ross BR 03-94 A521 was designed specifically for the Alpine F1 team, and with timing in mind. Rebellion Timepieces is a small independent brand based in Switzerland that builds timepieces with an automotive and machine inspiration. And yes, that is the same watch that Lando got mugged for last year! Nowadays, they are perfectly suited for F1 drivers, piloting their machines around the track at 320km/h. It is home to rookie Zhou Guanyu, and veteran Valtteri Bottas. The green is striking, and absolutely beautiful in ceramic. Having deals with both McLaren and Ferrari makes it somewhat unique in this space. Mercedes was a modern force in F1 up until the updated regulations last year that saw the team plagued with performance issues. Its association with Williams makes sense as it’s one high-precision British brand aligned to another. Williams and Bremont Mercedes AMG Petronas and IWC Before digital stopwatches and automated timing, races were timed on chronographs.