Interesting developments. Certainly puts Renault behind a bit, and certainly a bit surprising. But then there's a difference between the fans / media, and professionals. The fans / media love getting spun around by drama and all this crap, and then there are all sorts of theories and speculation and press conferences that people will read into however they please. Blah blah blah it's the end of the world for Renault teams. Professionals go to work, lay out the facts, make a plan, and execute it - cool and collected. Certainly there are very capable people at RBR, Renault, and the like.
In professional motorsports there are organizations who have suffered appreciable engine-related issues early in race seasons and come back to win championships. Ask me how I know...
Also-
dans79 wrote:Any engineer worth what they get payed in F1 would be able to indirectly get small performance improvements approved.
For what it's worth, many engineers in F1 get paid very poorly.
Grip is a four letter word. All opinions are my own and not those of current or previous employers.