At this point I am prepared to say:
Top 4 WCC group, in no particular order:
Ferrari
McLaren
Mercedes
Red Bull
Middle 4 WCC group, in no particular order:
AlphaTauri
Aston Martin
Williams
Alpine
Bottom 2 WCC group, in no particular order:
Alfa Romeo
HAAS
I may be wrong and HAAS or Alfa Romeo may have a dominant or even regularly race winning car, or even AlphaTauri, Aston Martin, Williams or Alpine may be dominant or at least regular race winners, but at this point that seems unlikely. For now, I suspect that Ferrari, McLaren, Red Bull and Mercedes will be the regular winners -- yes I am confident enough to hope it will be a four way battle for the WCC!
adrianjordan wrote: ↑25 Feb 2022, 14:11
Agreed. How many constructors titles has a Newey designed car won in the modern F1 era, how many has a Mercedes won?
This conveniently overlooks that Mercedes GP refused to approve the supply of customer Mercedes HPP power units to Red Bull Racing at a fair commercial rate.
Is it surprising that the Red Bull cars won less when equipped with Renault power units anywhere from 40hp to 80hp down, and Honda power units anywhere from 20hp to 40hp down until 2021 when they were finally on par?
You will note, for example, the expertly-designed Barnard MP4/1 and Dernie FW12 going from race winners to off the pace when fitted with uncompetitive engines (the Cosworth that was competitive and then became uncompetitive against turbos, and the Judd which was uncompetitive compared to the prior Honda turbo respectively). Notably the FW12C immediately became considerably more competitive, largely by simply fitting a more competitive Renault engine.
adrianjordan wrote: ↑25 Feb 2022, 14:11
Yes, he's good, but he long since stopped being the
Silver Bullet designer that people still worship him as.
Ironically this overlooks that when Newey did have access to Mercedes engines, those Mercedes engines were fairly unreliable especially immediately after beryllium was banned. This was in stark contrast to the metronomic reliability of Bryne era Ferraris of the early 2000's. It seems the Mercedes were not just unreliable but also down on power in 2004 compared to Ferrari, BMW and even Honda (please correct me if I am wrong?).
Regardless, Newey has been a valuable asset to the Jaguar / Red Bull team.