xpensive wrote:But worst of all is this never ending bs about having an inferior engine to the Mercedes...first of all, I don't think it is...
I'd be inclined to agree if it wasn't for races such as Spa and especially Monza, where both they and Renault fell away relative to where they'd been. Speed trap figures only tell you part of the story. They don't tell you how quickly a car is getting to a top speed or how long it's been able to maintain it and they don't tell you how much downforce a team is taking out of the chassis through corners in order to reduce drag. That's why the bit of logic about Petrov holding off Alonso in the final race doesn't hold up.
I think we've been over this on a few threads but people still don't want to see the correllating results.
While the Renault is probably very, very good in most respects there's every reason to believe they're missing some top end power. Red Bull, Horner and especially Newey are simply hammering away at it because that's the way Newey historically works. Worrying about drag is for people who can't make engines.....
They'll have opportunities to do something about that next season with KERS and the rear wing however. Fortunately, this season McLaren gave Red Bull and Renault the F-duct idea that Renault took all season to develop well.
...secondly if Newey really wanted FI's engine contract, I'm fairly certain that Mateschitz would make it happen.
Both McLaren and especially Mercedes GP do not want Red Bull having the same engine as them. They simply can't afford that because the pressure will only get ever greater. Mercedes got embarrassed enough last season when a FI blasted past Schumacher at Spa as if he wasn't there with the same engine.