Spoutnik wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 10:41
Interesting comments...
McLaren's best years to date were with a Renault engine.
By getting close to supplier like Renault it's possible to build a successful partenership as Red Bull did with Honda...
Renault will always have their own team as team A. They have 100% control over the cooling and packing of the engine.
Do you think the no-pod stunt of Mercedes this year would be possible for a B team like McLaren?
Spoutnik wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 10:41
I don't think McLaren was targeted to be a loser of the hybrid era, they had litteraly the best engine in 2014, they tried something with Honda, and they let them go when they started improving. From their they had a very reliable PU with a little power deficit but Red Bull managed to win some race with it you know...
Yes they were. Especially Ferrari was in big anger against McLaren and RedBull when the new engine rules were shaped and lobbied for an as complicated and as open as possible cooling of the engine. Just check the rules...there is up till today no single spec part in cooling or any cost reduction in cooling. Only internal engine parts are highly restricted to reduce cost.
Mercedes realized this, supported Ferrari and went for their own works team.
Spoutnik wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 10:41
They don't need to build their own engine again to be successful... Especially as engine are said to be more or less equal now.
Yes and no. Basically this is what we saw last season...once the aero rules are stable over years the B teams catch up. This year with the E10 and new aero there is a bigger gap to B teams.
So if we are lucky, the aero rules stay the same and the new engines get more delayed. Then teams like McLaren will catch up.
JordanMugen wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 12:04
basti313 wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 10:17
- McLaren is one of the losers of the Hybrid aera
Isn't that only because McLaren refused to sell to Mercedes-Benz when they had the chance?
Good question.
No, I do not think you can say this. It is the whole concept of McLaren to be an F1 constructor, high tech supplier and sportscar manufacturer. But the DNA comes from being a F1 constructor.
Selling the team to Merc would have meant to sell out the DNA of the McLaren group. Impossible, isn't it?
You are right on the money. Of course this keeping of the DNA in the end put them far behind to Merc, Ferrari, RedBull in terms of available group budgets. And as said, I think it is wrong to look only at the F1 budgets, this is not what pulls good people into your team. Newey and Allison designing boats and road cars is only one example of what a strong group means...and the McLaren group is simply not as strong as a tech inventor with money to play as for example RedBull is today.
But I think a core of the issues are simple management issues:
- McLaren was sticking to Mercedes while they were "hostile". They suddenly had the manpower drain in aero and chassis and an engine hard to integrate.
- Then they rushed Honda. Honda had to deploy the engine one year earlier and was forced into the token system a year earlier.
- Once the good step to the split turbo was done McLaren cancelled the deal under strongly rising performance.
While the first one of the three is hard to prevent, that last one was utterly stupid.