And with engine rules as they are now, the engine in not, and will not be, real differentiator.Pierce89 wrote:Furthermore, they'll never be a BETTER engine manufacturer than Mercedes, so WHY?
You can spend this money better elsewere.
And with engine rules as they are now, the engine in not, and will not be, real differentiator.Pierce89 wrote:Furthermore, they'll never be a BETTER engine manufacturer than Mercedes, so WHY?
RenaultF1 claim their engine program costs them €120million per year. That's with a long frozen engine spec, and all the required infrastructure, process, competences, design and expensive debug (explosions) already in place.Pierce89 wrote:Mclaren would have to spend at least 100 million to get to the same place they are now. I don't see any reason for Mclaren to build f1 engines, they'll never sell enough 200,000 dollar road cars for the marketing to pay for it. Why blow a hundred mill or so to be in the same place?
Furthermore, they'll never be a BETTER engine manufacturer than Mercedes, so WHY?
The Honda thing would be good. I was railing against these people that think Mclaren can come in as a top engine supplier just because they're Mclaren. They don't have the money or engine experience that any competitive(so that excludes Cosworth) manufacturer has. You'll not see Mclaren building F1 engines anytime soon.feynman wrote:RenaultF1 claim their engine program costs them €120million per year. That's with a long frozen engine spec, and all the required infrastructure, process, competences, design and expensive debug (explosions) already in place.Pierce89 wrote:Mclaren would have to spend at least 100 million to get to the same place they are now. I don't see any reason for Mclaren to build f1 engines, they'll never sell enough 200,000 dollar road cars for the marketing to pay for it. Why blow a hundred mill or so to be in the same place?
Furthermore, they'll never be a BETTER engine manufacturer than Mercedes, so WHY?
Just to keep ticking over a reasonable F1 engine costs that much, they claw back some of that money from selling customer units ... but McLaren starting from scratch definitely wouldn't come in any less than that number, lots of zeroes, and that's to build an engine arguably weaker than their current supplier.
The Ricardo engines that go into the back of their roadcars, will all have shiny McLaren badges on them, and that is more than satisfactory for the market.
How many extra more roadcars will having an in-house V6 engine in their F1 racecar help them shift? As a rough guess, they'd need something like an additional 7,500 MP4-12C every year just to break even on the proposition, doesn't look sensible.
As to your second point though, I'll disagree. They probably do want to get out from under Mercedes.
Firstly they would prefer to be paid to bolt-in engines, rather than send tens of millions to help a rival team on the grid.
... And second, future Benz high-performance engines will certainly be designed and upgraded for the best needs of the Benz F1 team, customers always come second. McLaren I imagine would much prefer a busy squad of Honda techs diligently optimizing and refining an engine program for their car, rather than taking shipments of zero-input black-box customer engines, the only thing you know for certain is that they are guaranteed not to look quite as good on the dyno as the ones the factory will keep for themselves.
The MP4/12C's engine is collaborative design between McLaren and Riccardo. The production of the block, and heads is also subcontracted to Riccardo who farm out the actual casting work. It is a still a McLAren engine whichever way you spin it.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:In all honesty if Mercedes are going to spend the cash, isnt it their right to get the best?
McLaren will be faced with much the same choice as they have today, namely Ferrari, Renault and Mercedes. Ferrari you can rule out for obvious reason, Renault will be a RB works team and it will be up to Red Bull should McLaren opt for this.
I don't think they would allow it as McLaren vetoed Red Bull receiving Mercedes power back in 2009.
As for what the name says on the cam covers of the 12C, enthusiasts will know its not a McLaren engine. Regardless of what people think.
True. They aren't about to sacrifice wins just to have their name plate on the engine block. They'll develop their own, and then see how it stacks up with what is available to them on the market. If it falls short, they'll regroup and try again.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Yes, McLaren will have an engine all their own making.
But, not yet. They need baby steps, rather than huge leaps in this area.