First off, your english is quite well and very understandable to include your punctuation.
My belief is Ferrari is still following its fundamental layout with regards to the ICE and turbo components since 2014. When you have 2 engine manufacturers following a 3rd engine manufacturer who has developed the split-turbo layout of this turbo-hybrid formula since 2007, it would make sense to "do as the Romans do" that yield results.
The formula is currently in an engine freeze till 2026. IF Ferrari doesn't get the performance right in 2022, we've got 4 years of Mercedes and RedBull fighting it out. I expect Renault to catch up in 2 to 3 years time.
You know the definition of insanity??? Doing the same thing over and over and over again with very little gains in performance as it relates to F1.
I haven't seen a current Ferrari production car turbos layout but my guess would be that the turbo's are layed out next to the banks of the cylinders alongside the exhaust manifolds....which is typical and has been followed for decades.
Mercedes and BMW with regards to production cars currently, have their turbo's inside the valley of both banks of cylinders running along the axis of the engine....a more tighter package when compared to the older typical layout of where the turbos are situated.
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