His name is actually Sylt. I've seen different quality of publishing by him. He was doing some decent work when he was compiling figures from across the industry to give an idea of the revenue streams in F1.Pup wrote:That story was written by Pitpass' resident moron, Chris Sylit, who had no doubt misread yet another annual report.
I see no difference, apart from the object in question - Mercedes and Red Bull are both racing to sell more of their products, whether it be energy drinks or road carsWhiteBlue wrote:The exception to that rule is Red Bull. They have the primary goal of pushing the product. But that is also best done by winning.
Yes, that is the same for all teams pushing one product like Red Bull, Ferrari, Mercedes and so on. Stand alone racing teams like Sauber, Willliams and McLaren lately are different. Their mentality also changes when they start to exist only for the product. Sauber and McLaren will be interesting to watch in that respect in the coming years.Hangaku wrote:I see no difference, apart from the object in question - Mercedes and Red Bull are both racing to sell more of their products, whether it be energy drinks or road carsWhiteBlue wrote:The exception to that rule is Red Bull. They have the primary goal of pushing the product. But that is also best done by winning.
This is getting way off topic but ...WhiteBlue wrote:Yes, that is the same for all teams pushing one product like Red Bull, Ferrari, Mercedes and so on. Stand alone racing teams like Sauber, Willliams and McLaren lately are different. Their mentality also changes when they start to exist only for the product. Sauber and McLaren will be interesting to watch in that respect in the coming years.
JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:White blue
Very intelligent piece on chris sylt. I, as an unashamed Mercedes fan had to read many posts on crash.net by "experts"(quotes for a very good reason) quoting this guy as a source.
His piece on Mercedes-Benz as a company existing soley as a basis for PR to shift below average products is shameful at best. He uses figures for his own ends and doesnt report the whole story. Rather I prefer the constructive criticisms of Journos like Chris Harris, who rightly berated Mercedes for the woeful products of the late 90s and early 00's. But never lost sight of the fact that Mercedes is a great marque and worthy of its heritage