If a customer starts demanding, as Renault have said, will that not start to put stresses and strains on getting components out the door in the guise Renault intended?Juzh wrote:An overwhelming part of the blame falls squarely on renault's shoulders, and I fail to see any relevance in that and RB's engine supplier in the future.Gaz. wrote: If you think Renault are 100% to blame, would you care to suggest where RBR will get an engine from for 2017?
A company breaking under stress due a malcontent customer, is not a strong company. It tells that its leaders act on emotion instead of reasoning.If a customer starts demanding, as Renault have said, will that not start to put stresses and strains on getting components out the door in the guise Renault intended?
I have to agree on this, most companies the size of Renault would have told RBR to stick where the sun don't shine by now.turbof1 wrote: A company breaking under stress due a malcontent customer, is not a strong company. It tells that its leaders act on emotion instead of reasoning.
The blame still lies with renault, only now you can add to its CV "breaks and fails when customers are rightfully demanding".
But look at the situation as a whole Turbo. Renault are behind, and they got panned by Red Bull last year.turbof1 wrote:A company breaking under stress due a malcontent customer, is not a strong company. It tells that its leaders act on emotion instead of reasoning.If a customer starts demanding, as Renault have said, will that not start to put stresses and strains on getting components out the door in the guise Renault intended?
The blame still lies with renault, only now you can add to its CV "breaks and fails when customers are rightfully demanding".
They didn't even run it on the test bed!Abiteboul wrote:Performance is linked to several factors: the chassis, the driver and the engine. As a package, we have lost ground over Mercedes. I am convinced that our engine has progressed, but we are currently dealing with some specific issues which prevent us from fully exploiting its potential. We implemented some last minute upgrades which bypassed some standard validation procedures, such as running on the test-bed. These upgrades are what posed a problem in Melbourne."
Red Bull led us to a frantic quest for development.
We must now think about how we dealt with the situation, as we sidestepped our conventional procedures. Perhaps we changed too quickly some parts of our engine, and maybe we now need to revert back to a more stable configuration which offers a satisfactory performance. We've been building F1 engines for thirty seven years, so our expertise is unquestionable."
"satisfactory". To who exactly? I'm eager to see this satisfactory performance in action.Abiteboul wrote:and maybe we now need to revert back to a more stable configuration which offers a satisfactory performance.
That's the issue. Why in earth would you put untested parts on a homologated power unit that needs to do on average 5 races? It's one thing that your customer is asking for this, but to actually give in to such a crazy demand. That's what I meant with it not being "strong": they should have told RBR that they can't do that. Putting blame at the team is not right since the manufacturer both has the responsibility and end decision.FoxHound wrote:Here's another link to the story...worded differently.
http://en.f1i.com/news/7101-renault-ans ... nces.html?
They didn't even run it on the test bed!Abiteboul wrote:Performance is linked to several factors: the chassis, the driver and the engine. As a package, we have lost ground over Mercedes. I am convinced that our engine has progressed, but we are currently dealing with some specific issues which prevent us from fully exploiting its potential. We implemented some last minute upgrades which bypassed some standard validation procedures, such as running on the test-bed. These upgrades are what posed a problem in Melbourne."
Red Bull led us to a frantic quest for development.
We must now think about how we dealt with the situation, as we sidestepped our conventional procedures. Perhaps we changed too quickly some parts of our engine, and maybe we now need to revert back to a more stable configuration which offers a satisfactory performance. We've been building F1 engines for thirty seven years, so our expertise is unquestionable."
Another question I have, is why would Renault do this unless it was a specific request from Red Bull?
Agreed, RBR telling Renault to pull their fingers out and make a competitive engine is hardly unreasonable imo!Juzh wrote: More excuses by renault, even after they admitted they messed up. Which one is it now?
Results and numbers on track are loud and clear.
But Red Bull telling Renault what to put on the engine is ok?djos wrote:Agreed, RBR telling Renault to pull their fingers out and make a competitive engine is hardly unreasonable imo!Juzh wrote: More excuses by renault, even after they admitted they messed up. Which one is it now?
Results and numbers on track are loud and clear.
Im a change manager by occupation, here's how the convo would have gone:FoxHound wrote:But Red Bull telling Renault what to put on the engine is ok?
Dont get me wrong, Renault should have held firm.
But as this is no ordinary customer/supplier relationship, was Red Bull correct to make the demands for the new untested parts?
Where in this hypothesis does openly berating Renault fit? Carlos Ghosn(The Renault boz-boz) is having kittens over this, I can assure it.Richard wrote:More importantly:
Renault - If we hold back we'll need another token to change from the winter test part to these newer parts later in the year.
RB - If you use that part now we can update it later as "reliability"
Renault - Correct
RB - Go for it.
Renault- After all "reliability" updates worked well for us last time.
RB - I'll start up the PR machine, we'll get Honda on board for the FIA to allow a reliability upgrade in May