Nah, in unrestricted period everyone could pop up engines at will. It shouldn't be a problem to make couple extra for anyone. The question is what do Ferrari and Mercedes gain by lending engines to their competitors.adrianjordan wrote:I'm not so sure that Mercedes have shelves full of engines ready for any team that wants them to pop in and buy...my guess would be that both Merc and Ferrari only have enough capacity to build the engines their partner teams have already ordered...the teams who went with Renault are almost certainly stuck with Renault...Manoah2u wrote:the problem here is it isn't a team problem. it's a essential part problem, the heart of the car,rjsa wrote:Ferrari hasn't screwed up like that, they felt short but put a fight.
We are looking at failing to start, that's REALLY messed up.
and it goes for 4 teams.
No way do 4 teams have made a similar mistake, the fault is at renault, clear and simple. But that has
been clear after a couple of days already. The problem they'll be facing now is how fast they'll fix it.
Prospects aren't looking good. Again, this raises the question; can renault bring a reasonable package
in time for the first gp so the 4 renault powered teams are able to compete? If you'd have to believe the
news seeping out, it'll be 20 weeks? not before silverstone, thus? That's hardly acceptable, but given the
fact Toro Rosso did pull out most laps, and gaining speed/laptime, the question is, is renault gonna have
to take 20 weeks, or does RedBull need 20 weeks to fix the problem, combined with Renault?
I don't see RedBull nor Toro Rosso stepping out of the powerplants, i still smell possibility for Lotus to jump
to a Merc engine, Cosworth if really neccesary and feasible. It'd be a shocker if cosworth could atleast produce
a engine that actually runs, how remote that chance might be.
Merc certainly has a good package ready to go. The question is though, does the contract allow, and does finances
allow?
I assume Caterham can't pay the Merc engines. but can Lotus?
If i were lotus? I'd hang a merc engine in that puppy today - guaranteed a working powerplant and guaranteed being
part of the competition.
No and no. The amount for this season is said to be between 15 and 25 million €.radosav wrote:I thougt that every engine manufacturer has to sell their engines to any team that wishes to buy them , for a price of 5 million !
How is that related to Lotus car? Asking earlier about possible early test was considered off-topic and deleted Hedge the bet how - contracts for engines would still be separate and with manufacturers. Do you think they could swap willy nilly and slap with a hammer if it didn't fit if it was Ferrari for TR?rjsa wrote:Looking now it was a really poor thinking from Red Bull management to move STR to the same engine as RBR during this big transition... the should have hedged their bet...
What about times? I bet they ran at 85% of engine capacity.fawe4 wrote:Now where are the pictures.
I think the reason he was asking for pictures is because that would give allot more insight in to the car than times would. Lotus did almost 100km so at 4.5 Km track length we are talking about 21 laps or something like that? I can just about gauruntee that most of them were simply install laps, checking systems etc. They had no interest in setting times and most of the laps were probably done 30 seconds off the pace doing constant aero runs etc. So I would say with certainty that the times ran would have 0 relevance at all.iotar__ wrote:What about times? I bet they ran at 85% of engine capacity.fawe4 wrote:Now where are the pictures.
No need for pictures - mileage info is enough as a "promotional" part . [Mercedes are already double world champions based on km ran]
Juzh wrote:They were covering distance, yes. But they did it 15s off the pace.