JPower wrote: ↑12 Mar 2022, 20:06
You can't catch up to team that's spent $300+ million a year for a decade within one year.
Renault have been back in Formula One as a constructor since 2016 though. I don't understand why the five year plan to contend for the title by 2020 didn't progress as planned?
Cyril Abiteboul:
Red Bull took five years, Mercedes as well. I would say our plan is ambitious.
I can assure you that Viry has the people and the money.
https://www.grandprix247.com/2016/02/05 ... velopment/
Bob Bell:
If you look at it historically, it took Renault five years from when they bought Benetton to win their first championship, it took Mercedes five years from buying Brawn to win their first championship, [and] it took Red Bull five years from buying Jaguar to win a first championship.
For me, a five year time window from where we are now to winning a championship is not unrealistic. We’d like to better that and we will do all that we can to better that, but that’s not an unrealistic time frame.
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/bob- ... c/3221283/
Was it due to neglect of facility investment by GENII between 2010 & 2015 leaving Enstone with outdated facilities? Taking more than three years to build new facilities seems excessive though. Shouldn't Renault have had a new wind tunnel, an AVL dyno etc by early 2019 at the latest?
Similarly there were significant delays on Viry introducing a split turbo power unit (introduced now in 2022), while Honda introduced it already in 2017, so why was that? Abiteboul noted Viry already having all the people and money required to, presumably, build the best power unit on the grid.
diffuser wrote: ↑13 Mar 2022, 04:59
Alpine/Renault have Amazing facilities. They've just recently upgraded them. Think the wind tunnel was completed in 2018.
Great stuff!
JPower wrote: ↑13 Mar 2022, 15:49
Renault was not spending on that level.
Are they are in Formula One to win or not?
If they are happy to just compete and promote the Alpine brand why not just say so up front? It seems Alonso was expecting a WDC-contending car, but that doesn't necessary seem to be the case yet -- although it could still be an Alpine front row lockout in Bahrain.
As an example, even if Mercedes have failed and produced a car that with poor handling traits (however unlikely that is), at least it is clear that have spared no effort to attempt to build the fastest car possible. Red Bull Racing similarly tend to push every rule to the limit, even if that was fairly unsuccessful until 2021. Ferrari similarly were so determined to win, they allegedly cheated certain fuel flow regulations in 2019.
Have Alpine shown the same single-minded approach to trying to win?
I do have a lot of faith in Pat Fry, he is a very good engineer. So I guess, even if the Alpine A522 is not a Brawn out of the box, we'll see continual improvements to it.
Yours truly (Trulli),
Frustrated Ricciardo fan
PS. For whatever reason, perhaps wrongly, it seems that Ricciardo lost faith in the project, however Alonso clearly saw enough promising results in the wind tunnel and on the engine test bench.