Cs98 wrote: ↑04 Aug 2023, 15:14
This video is from 2023, so it's going on as we speak
I can show you a video of a 2010 Red Bull doing donuts in 2023. Doesn't mean the 2010 Red Bull is a 2023 development. Development of the engine for the Project one ended some time ago in 2021 while emissions were being tested.
The engine itself is derived directly from the the concepts of the the W07 implementation coded PU106C. Don't believe me? Check the plenum addition on the M09 variant and after which gained considerable efficiency and power(40bhp).
That does not exist on the Project One, because it's from an earlier iteration of the evolution.
Cs98 wrote: ↑04 Aug 2023, 15:14
Even something as simple as training staff. You can just pay them to work under the AMG One project until they are skilled enough to work on current F1 engines. Or keep staff jumping between the two.
I'm struggling to see an advantageous reasoning to having staff learn how to build a 2016 F1 engine. How does this become a net benefit to the performance? How do lower-end assembly nippers building a 106C translate into high end development M09 performance?
Because what you are doing is conflating the build process to the development one.
Any time a team does a demo they have engines sent to their departments for maintenance. They all have dedicated staff outside the budget cap too. Heritage cars don't just show up and run on their own, and they are under the same remit as the Project 1. If you could make a discernible difference between those 2, I'm all ears again.
Cs98 wrote: ↑04 Aug 2023, 15:14
As the guy says in the video, the engines are basically the same
He said "they're similar".
And to produce a split turbo hybrid F1 engine, he's right. A 2016 PU106C is similar to a M14E variant to
produce which is separate from
development.
It would be logical for a Hypercar with a specialist 2016 derived F1 engine, to have it built where they build F1 engines.
The alternative is to have a 200 million euro F1 assembly line in Stuttgart. Of course, Mercedes should have known this way back in 2016 when the budget cap didn't exist, right?
https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a1534 ... -hypercar/
Cs98 wrote: ↑04 Aug 2023, 15:14
So doing an off label F1 engine project in the same factory is not a concern, nothing to see there, no potential for abuse. But you do want us to be gravely concerned about the hypercar projects because they use some form of ground effect, yet to be competely revealed. I don't think I'm the one ignoring the elephant in the room TBH. I can see potential issues with both types of projects.
Because engines are so wildly far apart? It's kinda bizarre to look at engines, when the top 3 engines are fairly similar in performance. Yet a PU106C is being dubbed "an off label F1 engine project"
You want to dissect this. When most teams have Hybrid PU's for heritage shows.
But dissecting a ground effect side project in the most dominant season in F1 history, in a ground effect formula....well this must be equivalent to a 7 year old catalytic converted f1 engine built by apprentices