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Red Bull's Albon: F1 rivals would've discovered sneaky Mercedes DAS

Red Bull driver Alex Albon reckons Formula 1 teams would have discovered Mercedes' "sneaky" dual-axis steering development even if it had not been picked up on pre-season testing TV footage

F1 is broadcasting the two 2020 pre-season tests at Barcelona, and Mercedes' innovative system was spotted being used by Lewis Hamilton during his stint on the morning of the second day of last week's opening test.

This led to intense speculation about what Mercedes was doing, and whether it was legal, with rival squads also expressing interest and raising their own questions.

Albon reckoned "maybe we wouldn't have seen it in so early in testing" but explained that F1 teams' practice of hiring photographers to keep an eye on rivals would have alerted them to what Mercedes was doing before the media became aware.

"It's quite nice to have all these on-boards and all that," he added.

"But at the same time, teams nowadays, they have photographers everywhere. Maybe we'd have known about it and you guys wouldn't have.

"We were speaking about it with the team - just how would that feel just as a driver; moving the steering wheel must feel very strange.

"But that's what testing is about and that's what simulators are about as well. So, I'm sure they've tried it before.

"But it is sneaky. To be honest, I don't really know what it's being used for - I was driving the whole day [when the system was first revealed].

"So I just came back without a debrief and suddenly there was this thing on the screen all the time - replays showing the steering."

When asked if Red Bull was concerned it did not have its own version of DAS on the RB16, which Albon and team-mate Max Verstappen called a step forward over the team's 2019 challenger, Albon said: "No - we're focused on ourselves at the minute.

"Of course maybe that's a future thing but for the moment we've just been doing our runs, getting the laps in, getting miles in.

"There were a couple of things [to sort out], obviously like minor things, as always, tuning our car, and then we'll worry about it when we come to Melbourne."

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