Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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turbof1
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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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bhall II wrote:
turbof1 wrote:The same can be said about people who think the earth is round while it's actually spherical, flattening towards the polars ;).
Whatever makes things easier for you works for me. :D

There's no guarantee anything I've said here will ever come to fruition. But, not one drop of it is in any way irrational such that it can be dismissed out of hand or rejected as a matter of course. I know that much is certain.
Well you tried to mock me, I only found it fair to return the favour :lol: . Anyway I also edited my previous post.
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bhall II
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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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turbof1 wrote:I have seen one wild rumor starting with one source being taken over by several others...
I guess I just don't see the aspects of this whole saga that make it "wild" rather than a logical progression of eventualities. Of course, that might be because I likely have a very different view on the nature and background of the sport's current state.

I think Mercedes' dominance is less about anything they've done right and more about what their rivals have done wrong. That's honestly not meant to take anything away from their success. But, it's still hard to deny that it was greatly assisted by hapless competition and bizarre homologation rules.

One team shot itself in the foot (Ferrari); another is in complete disarray (Red Bull-Renault); the latest arrived woefully unprepared (Honda); and the rules make it difficult for anyone to catch up once behind.

Remember when the general consensus around here was an expectation that all PUs would be more or less the same due to massively restricted regulations?

Image
This --- still cracks me up

I guess we forgot that most people aren't too bright. Had every manufacturer addressed the formula as studiously as Mercedes, F1 would look a lot different right now, because the Silver Arrows aren't powered by silver bullets, just solid, level-headed engineering.

Point being: while it's flat-out impossible to say that success will ever come easy, I don't think it's quite the Herculean task it's regularly portrayed to be. As such, I don't think it's irrational for a team that lacks powertrain experience to get into the game anyway. If there's enough scope within the regulations for a Red Bull PU to get within striking distance of Mercedes' PU - not necessarily a given, mind you - it will happen.

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turbof1
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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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Point being: while it's flat-out impossible to say that success will ever come easy, I don't think it's quite the Herculean task it's regularly portrayed to be. As such, I don't think it's irrational for a team that lacks powertrain experience to get into the game anyway. If there's enough scope within the regulations for a Red Bull PU to get within striking distance of Mercedes' PU - not necessarily a given, mind you - it will happen.
I disagree. The timescale does not allow to produce a PU capable of driving around in a F1 race -and mind I'm saying driving around; I'm not talking about something that could even compete! I could argue why, but I have done that before, so again: we'll see soon.
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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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turbof1 wrote:I disagree. The timescale does not allow to produce a PU capable of driving around in a F1 race -and mind I'm saying driving around; I'm not talking about something that could even compete! I could argue why, but I have done that before, so again: we'll see soon.
Marussia's record of comfortably qualifying within the 107% rule despite year-old hardware invalidates your first claim, and I've never said a Red Bull PU would be competitive immediately. In fact...
bhall II wrote:Also, remember that no one is under any illusion that the situation is in any way ideal - I think. Whoever coined the phrase, "desperate times call for desperate measures," had something like this in mind, because it's not at all unlikely that Red Bull's 2016 season will make its 2014 and 2015 campaigns look like walks in the park. They are primed to strug-gul, but it's the only way forward at this point.
bhall II wrote:It's a risk, though. If my most pessimistic suspicions are correct, and genuine parity cannot be achieved within the framework of the current ever-tightening formula, this could turn into an expensive disaster.

[...]

It's not exactly written in stone that Red Bull is destined to struggle. But, conventional wisdom - as if such a thing exists in F1 - tells us that duplicated efforts have a tendency to greatly extend the time needed to complete a project. It's a question of available resources, and too much is not enough, especially when success requires beating teams like Mercedes and Ferrari at their own game.

If this thing happens, I think Red Bull has an awful lot of work to do.
bhall II wrote:[...]

When I earlier referred to the latest solution under discussion as a "win-win," it's because neither side stands to benefit from it more than the other. In actuality, both parties will lose, and it's gonna take a while for either to see signs of recovery.

Red Bull's chassis are a hell of a lot closer to winning a World Championship than anything that's gonna roll out of Enstone over the next few years, and Renault's ERS is all sorts of closer to winning a World Championship than anything Red Bull can devise over the same period.
Me on October 26 wrote:In fact, it would still behoove both parties to somehow revitalize the partnership. Making something else work, in whatever form(s) that might take, would represent yet another setback by default.
They're both ---. Royally.
Incidentally, I truly didn't think you were being close-minded before, but I do now. You're repudiating my comments with my comments as if I never made them in the first place.

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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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I think the biggest issue here is cross debate. On one hand, most replies are directed to poster A and evolve around the context of that discussion, and now you as poster B have entered and arguing a slightly different point with a slightly different context. I think who is arguing what is easily understood if one looks at the history of the entire thread (or at least the last 4 pages relating to this specific point) ........
Not for nothing, Rosberg's Championship is the only thing that lends credibility to Hamilton's recent success. Otherwise, he'd just be the guy who's had the best car. — bhall II
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turbof1
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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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Marussia's record of comfortably qualifying within the 107% rule despite year-old hardware invalidates your first claim, and I've never said a Red Bull PU would be competitive immediately. In fact...
I don't really think Marussia competes, nor do you. It drives around. Not the main point anyhow; the point was Red Bull cannot produce or get produced a PU that can drive around in F1, within 4 months. The issue is that currently you need the MGU-K and MGU-H to finish the races. The 100kg of fuel does not produce enough energy for that. They might get an ICE, great. They just solved the most easiest part of the unsolvable puzzle.
Incidentally, I truly didn't think you were being close-minded before, but I do now. You're repudiating my comments with my comments as if I never made them in the first place.
You truly misunderstood - I'm keeping an open mind, but until now absolutely nothing has come along to change my opinion on the matter. Until now it's at best speculation. To repeat: give something with a stronger foundation then loose sand and I'll start to believe. I try to remain as detached from the current discussion as possible, it's actually useless since it's going in circles for the umpteenth time, but that's been made very difficult when it gets confused with having a closed mind.

Also I never said you said that they would not compete inmediately. I wanted to be clear that when I say they drive around, that it's not the same as competing. Given that even trying to be clear can confuse you, I have more reason to limit myself mostly on commenting what's in the news.

I'm also quite confused what you mean that I am repudiating your comments with your own comments (yes, I know what the word means). I'm not using your own comments against you, if that is what you mean. I however do not accept the authority on that as again it's speculation at best, which you underlined yourself too basically.
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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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Jumpin' baby Jesus on a jungle gym.

Yes, a closed mind, because you can't seem to understand that this...
The issue is that currently you need the MGU-K and MGU-H to finish the races. The 100kg of fuel does not produce enough energy for that. They might get an ICE, great. They just solved the most easiest part of the unsolvable puzzle.
...already exists, a fact which has been directly expressed to you.

More than once.
FoxJET, yesterday wrote:Turbo, they are already and have been developing parts since Illien arrived. Unless he has just sat at Building 9 twiddling thumbs the last 11 months.
bhall II wrote:
turbof1 wrote:Finally confirmation that we can put this kind of nonsense to rest...
Did you actually read it?
The true part: Actually Red Bull could line up next year again with a Renault's engine. Then he would not likely carry the name Renault on the cylinder heads. The fact that Red Bull on the electric page pursues own development, is not new. The troop in Milton Keynes already lets since two years their(her) know-how with the battery and the software flow in for the energy management. It is the single part which functions uncomplainingly...
To polish that up a little bit...
Fox Sports, November 6, 2015 wrote:The base engine will be the long-awaited upgraded Renault unit, which Red Bull is expected to use from next weekend’s Brazilian Grand Prix onwards, but is likely to be rebranded as an ‘Infiniti’ in deference to the luxury performance marque that is part of the Renault/Nissan automotive portfolio.
motorsport.com, November 6, 2015 wrote:Renault has confirmed that Red Bull will use its new Formula 1 engine at the Brazilian Grand Prix.
Now, what you're gonna want to do next is immediately discount everything I've written above and then repeat it back to me tomorrow as if it's biting commentary.

:D

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turbof1
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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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bhall II wrote:Jumpin' baby Jesus on a jungle gym.

Yes, a closed mind, because you can't seem to understand that this...
The issue is that currently you need the MGU-K and MGU-H to finish the races. The 100kg of fuel does not produce enough energy for that. They might get an ICE, great. They just solved the most easiest part of the unsolvable puzzle.
...already exists, a fact which has been directly expressed to you.

More than once.
FoxJET, yesterday wrote:Turbo, they are already and have been developing parts since Illien arrived. Unless he has just sat at Building 9 twiddling thumbs the last 11 months.
bhall II wrote:
turbof1 wrote:Finally confirmation that we can put this kind of nonsense to rest...
Did you actually read it?
The true part: Actually Red Bull could line up next year again with a Renault's engine. Then he would not likely carry the name Renault on the cylinder heads. The fact that Red Bull on the electric page pursues own development, is not new. The troop in Milton Keynes already lets since two years their(her) know-how with the battery and the software flow in for the energy management. It is the single part which functions uncomplainingly...
To polish that up a little bit...
Fox Sports, November 6, 2015 wrote:The base engine will be the long-awaited upgraded Renault unit, which Red Bull is expected to use from next weekend’s Brazilian Grand Prix onwards, but is likely to be rebranded as an ‘Infiniti’ in deference to the luxury performance marque that is part of the Renault/Nissan automotive portfolio.
motorsport.com, November 6, 2015 wrote:Renault has confirmed that Red Bull will use its new Formula 1 engine at the Brazilian Grand Prix.
Now, what you're gonna want to do next is immediately discount everything I've written above and then repeat it back to me tomorrow as if it's biting commentary.

:D
I had a big text typed first, but instead of making things worst, I'll leave it this: turn off your pc, and go outside, take some fresh air. You are not calm, perhaps a bit of my fault too, but you aren't guilt free on it yourself:
could argue why, but I have done that before, so again: we'll see soon.
I have explained it in previous posts - no need to repeat. I'm limiting myself to posting personal quotes and I'll be giving my opinion on it. I'll be eager to avoid going to endless loop discussions. Again, might I be proven wrong in the end I will accept that. Guess we'll find that out soon, possibly within 3 weeks.
It automatically means I'm not digging into what you said. This is why it's a very bad idea to draw someone into a discussion who does not want and who previously under the same assessment of trying to avoid the discussion, did not go through everything you said. That's right, and perhaps a little bit my bad too, but I have not readed everything. I don't like to invest time into reading through tons of articles only they don't have a good source and/or the comments made here are very dodgy reading between the lines. It's why I said multiple times I'd rather just give my opinion on news items.

That is not the same as a closed mind. You can give your frustration of me not agreeing and not willing to discuss it, that name, but it is not the same. I'm asking for something more solid then just rumors and reintepretations from articles. The quoted articles you gave did not lend that credibility since there's not a single reliable source. Give me that, and you have a discussion. But please don't try to convince of anything with reaching out to straws. It's quite frankly unpleasant. To be blunt beneath you.

I'll send you a PM regarding the ERS systems. For the rest I kindly ask you to refrain from drawing me into a discussion I made clear I half-arsely only follow, but do not even (want to) comment on.
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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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It automatically means I'm not digging into what you said...
It's plainly obvious to me that you've not given my thoughts the courtesy of your consideration. And to imply it's in any way my fault for drawing you in is patently absurd.

I'm dying to know: what part of the article below made it an acceptable confirmation of your view, yet unacceptable as a confirmation of mine? I'm capable of absorbing vast arrays of subtlety and nuance. But, I can't make myself see this as anything more than rank hypocrisy.
bhall II wrote:
turbof1 wrote:Finally confirmation that we can put this kind of nonsense to rest...
Did you actually read it?
The true part: Actually Red Bull could line up next year again with a Renault's engine. Then he would not likely carry the name Renault on the cylinder heads. The fact that Red Bull on the electric page pursues own development, is not new. The troop in Milton Keynes already lets since two years their(her) know-how with the battery and the software flow in for the energy management. It is the single part which functions uncomplainingly...
If you're ever so inclined, reasonably credible insight and analysis is widely available, and it tends to look something like this...
Matthew Somerfield, November 5, 2015 wrote:We all know how critical Red Bull have been of Renault since we entered the hybrid era in 2014, the problem is, have Red Bull been as much to blame? From the outset it is my understanding that Red Bull had another Energy Store they had developed in-house to use for 2014 that they would use, effectively forcing Toro Rosso, Lotus and Caterham to do the same if the homologation procedure was to be adhered to. However, when they arrived at pre-season testing all was not well with said ES and they had to revert to the Renault designed ES (remember those pesky cooling issues they had). The one thing that still irks me about 2014 is that all the Renault powered teams got around the homologation process, as they ran differing exhaust configurations.

[...]

It could be argued that F1 survived well before Red Bull and could do so long after, however, from a commercial aspect they are an asset that the sport cannot really afford to lose. As such the FIA will allow a dual programme to be established with Renault going in one direction with the acquisition of Lotus, Red Bull will forge another path with Ilmor, making the requisite changes to the I.C.E's combustion and injection elements that Ilmor require, whilst also designing and developing their own turbo configuration and ERS. As the powerunit will essentially be classed as being designed by another manufacturer they'll be free to spend their development tokens on their own terms, free of Renaults influence. Furthermore, the change in the rules that was introduced to assist Honda this season, enabling the use of 5 complete powerunits, rather than 4 per driver as the second year teams had, should carry over too.

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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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It's plainly obvious to me that you've not given my thoughts the courtesy of your consideration. And to imply it's in any way my fault for drawing you in is patently absurd.
Because I have made so abundantly clear?
http://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewto ... 80#p608280
I'm dying to know: what part of the article below made it an acceptable confirmation of your view, yet unacceptable as a confirmation of mine?
It doesn't. I reject the premise:
turbof1 wrote:Yes, and I concluded that that section is not quoted from Illien. Just more meaningless speculation.
It stands and falls with the assumption that Red Bull would be getting normal but unbranded PU supply from Renault. Is it a problem that I agree with one part of the article, the part where Illien was quoted, and don't agree with the part where AMuS writes its opinion?
turbof1 wrote:I have explained it in previous posts - no need to repeat. I'm limiting myself to posting personal quotes and I'll be giving my opinion on it. I'll be eager to avoid going to endless loop discussions. Again, might I be proven wrong in the end I will accept that. Guess we'll find that out soon, possibly within 3 weeks.
I'll accept I should have readed a bit more thoroughly your comments. You deserve that respect. But in my defence, when you quoted this:
I hope it's enough to shake people of Illien-engine wonderland. It's not going to happen, not next year.
You choose to ignore this:
turbof1 wrote:http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/121683
I think we will take what we can get because we want to be racing
I know some people will read that as "that points towards their own engine" (I sincerely do not know how, but these last few days have proven people are very creative with reading). No, it doesn't. The underlining message is that they still have no solution towards next year. It fumes with desperation. You'd expect that Red Bull would atleast be more quiet and a bit more confient if they were developing an engine of their own. The fact is that Matechitz, Renault and Illien have denied the rumors in person. Ricciardo is now in person stating "we are still looking for a power unit; we are desperate so we'll take anything."

Also:
Unless no one gives us an engine, that is the only thing that will stop us from racing.
Reads very much like "if we can't anyone to supply us with an engine, we will have to quit". Not a smitch of hint towards their own PU.
That's a bit of hypocrity on your part too.
I'm dying to know: what part of the article below made it an acceptable confirmation of your view, yet unacceptable as a confirmation of mine? I'm capable of absorbing vast arrays of subtlety and nuance. But, I can't make myself see this as anything more than rank hypocrisy.
First of all, do we agree atleast that Ricciardo is a better source then for instance JT13. A driver directly quoted is going to be the better source, right? Not that a driver is constantly informed of everything, but we can safely assume that given Red Bull pulling through or not decides if Ricciardo races next year or not, so it's in his best interests to know.

Second, he made this very comment:
"Unless no one gives us an engine, that is the only thing that will stop us from racing.
Everything is of course open to interpretation, but the most straight forward one is that to assume he means with "us" is red bull. This implies if nobody supplies Red Bull, they will not race. Further implying they don't have their own engine plans because if they did they would be racing.

Now as far as your quote from Mark Hughes goes, Illien denied the rumors explicitly today. I can safely assume that if a development bearing someone's name, is denied by the same exact person, that it probably is not going to hold much reality right?

http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... 34139.html (thrown through the google translator, so be careful with reading)
So far, so bad. Only Mario Illien has strangely heard himself not. The Swiss Motor Pope responded surprised at the rumors and clarifies:.. "I know nothing of a dispute I also have no idea what upgrades Renault has incorporated in its modified engine Also, I can not imagine that a large company like Renault, the arrives risk, secretly install my development. "

Mario Illien had in the summer at the expense of Red Bull the cylinder head of the Renault V6 Turbo modified and achieved encouraging results, according to Red Bull so. However, Renault would rather bring its own development at the start. She ran in parallel with the Ilmor project.

Red Bull has taken the job to Ilmor nearly 2 million euros. Again, the story deviates from reality. She speaks of work on the block instead of the cylinder head. "If we had to block even touched, we would not have come with 12 token to make ends meet," Illien already told us in the summer.

Illien also denies that he would have received an engine department in Milton Keynes and that there are plans, along with Red Bull to revise the Renault engine next year. After your project has been rejected in September by Renault, Dietrich Mateschitz declared that it makes little sense to build a complete drive unit on its own it. It would take far too long in the complexity of the technology, until you reach a level of Mercedes would or Ferrari.
It is safe to say that Illien is not in the picture. It's a direct source, he is the source, so I'm rather believing that. I'll however accept Mark Hughes note that Red Bull made "key elements" of the ERS systems, while inmediately making the note that one can describe screws as key elements if they want to sound a bit more sensational. It'll probably be much more crucial parts, but it also implies Red Bull is at the same time very much dependent on Renault for most other parts, most likely some of those parts are other key elements too.

AMuS further said this:
The real part: In fact, Red Bull could compete again with a Renault engine next year. The would likely not bear the name of Renault on the cylinder heads. That Red Bull operates on the electric side-house development, is not new. The troops in Milton Keynes can be incorporated in the battery and software for energy management for two years their expertise. It is the only part that worked perfectly. A foreign development moreover, Renault is unlikely to allow. The disgrace Imagine if an outwardly developed Renault engine would be better than their own.
Emphasis on "could" of course. I don't believe that either. Matechitz denied this, in person. I'm not bothered to link to it again, you know just as well as me that's true he said that.

I also categorize the article from Somers the same as Joe Saward: a very nice theoritical exercise. But again I dispute they'll get supply from Renault, in any form. Red Bull is with empty hands in that case. Still, he makes quite a bit of sense. I'm willing to consider this further, despite that Matechitz was quite clear.

May I also point out that your quote from Somers does not speak in your defense. Red Bull showed they could not even built a reliable ES. The ES usually is the least taxed part of the whole PU, it is the part that breaks down the least. If Red Bull cannot even design the battery properly, then I have to question their capability to design the whole ERS system, if they don't have a Renault PU to built around, something which again Matechitz denied they were looking for.
I'm capable of absorbing vast arrays of subtlety and nuance.
I'm sorry? Have I been subtle or nuanced? :lol: My friend, I'm neither of that. I still stand with what I said earlier: I see unfounded rumors in general contradicting what involved people are being directly quoted. I hope you see that contradiction as well, or atleast a paradox. I think that's neither the issue. I have quite a black and white standpoint on that.
The issue here is not whether or not it's going to happen, but if it's possible at all. I'll admit I might have been too quick to draw lines here. I still think it's not possible without a Renault ICE, and difficult with one, but that's something completely open which indeed you were correct considering it. Going to happen? For me that's a black and white no. is it possible? Difficult, but difficult can work.
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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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I don't think it will be wise of redbull to bring another engine into the sport next year.
A 1 year old ferrari or mercedes unit, will be much better than even a brand new Renault or Honda engine.
They should have took the 2015 Ferrari engine offer.

Their last hope if they don't get any existing engines, is for Cosworth to dust off their concept and slap it on the back of the RB chassis.
For Sure!!

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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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In no particular order:

1. If I ever omit something, it's either the result of an oversight, or it's because I've decided the conversation would probably be better served by being that much simpler. It's never to avoid something.

2. Relative to queries that ponder possibility, I have very little interest in the answer to the question, "will they or won't they?" Matters of psyche are generally too messy for me, because they seem to inevitably boil down to stuff like this...

3. For nearly every quote from Red Bull leadership that's been mined and presented here to support one view, I've pointed out another from the same person that indicates something else. The hyper-paranoid world of F1 is rarely amenable to virtuous behavior.

It's like Al Davis famously said, "Just win, baby."

4. I can't believe I had to cut grass today. It's November. It's cold. There are leaves all over my lawn. Yet, the grass underneath is still somehow green and growing.

5. I'm almost certain that a few select members of this forum could probably band together and facilitate the design and construction of a decent F1-grade power unit if given a sufficient budget. One of the benefits of living in the age of a global service economy is that virtually anything can be obtained for the right price, and companies like AVL are just a phone call away.

So, I guess it's just rather odd to me to assume Mario Illien, of all people, couldn't do the same if given access to Dietrich Mateschitz's wallet.

6. It's also sorta baffling to me that apparently no one thought to involve Illien from the very beginning. Was it ever not advantageous to have him in the fold?

Pride goeth before the fall, I suppose.

8. Because f___ seven.

9. Despite my belief that an in-house design from Red Bull could ultimately prove competitive, I think qualitative concerns are largely irrelevant at this juncture for a team whose hubris and puzzling lack of foresight have left them stranded between two options: DIY or GTFO.

10. It would still benefit both Red Bull and Renault to figure out some way to make a full collaboration work, because quite literally every other imaginable solution is at least a step or two behind where they both currently stand. They don't have to love each other or hold hands in the shower, but cutting off each other's legs solves exactly nothing.

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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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I believe that Matesitz could pay Illien some money to built a decent hybrid v6. But i am deeply convinced he doesn't. Even if a Redbull pu would shatter the competition, a drinks company still cannot gain from such a succes, not as much as a car manufacturer could.

But Matesitz was willing to sell to VAG or work together, probably including the engine. There must be some engine development going in in Milton Keynes.

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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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1. If I ever omit something, it's either the result of an oversight, or it's because I've decided the conversation would probably be better served by being that much simpler. It's never to avoid something.
The issue is that you did omit it. Earlier, you were complaining I did that:
It's plainly obvious to me that you've not given my thoughts the courtesy of your consideration. And to imply it's in any way my fault for drawing you in is patently absurd.
I had my reason too, to omit ;). You know which one.
5. I'm almost certain that a few select members of this forum could probably band together and facilitate the design and construction of a decent F1-grade power unit if given a sufficient budget. One of the benefits of living in the age of a global service economy is that virtually anything can be obtained for the right price, and companies like AVL are just a phone call away.
I'm sure they could. It's not about budget though. I always have aknowledged Red Bull is capital-wise strong enough to do so, even though I'll always mark it as a very unwise investment in terms of ROI for an energy drink company. The issue is what our hypothetical group would also face: time. Red Bull is very short on it. We can both agree Red Bull is not going to build anything competitive for next year given the timeframe they have now. The difference is that I go one step further by claiming they are out of time to assemble that can reliably drive around at all. It might still be possible, but the impression I have is they have nothing in place for that. Instead 2 weeks ago they were doing negotiations with Honda. Do you make negotations with a supplier when you are developing your own engine?
So, I guess it's just rather odd to me to assume Mario Illien, of all people, couldn't do the same if given access to Dietrich Mateschitz's wallet.
I don't care if he could. i'm fairly certain that with enough will they can. But Illien denied the rumors.
3. For nearly every quote from Red Bull leadership that's been mined and presented here to support one view, I've pointed out another from the same person that indicates something else. The hyper-paranoid world of F1 is rarely amenable to virtuous behavior.
I deny you did so. I'm not bothered to go through all the quotes to verify, but I want 5 pages back; the best I've come across was a "no comment", which can be explained just as well as having every day a whole bunch of journalists in front of your office, being irritated you are facing the same questions over and over again and just cutting it short to no comment. All else was this:
Speaking to Autocar at the Goodwood Festival of Speed, Horner said the project "is still being talked about," and "hasn't been ruled out for the future."
Which is by no means any commitment and highly doubtable it's of relevance. Or this:
Mateschitz added: "There remain a few complicated solutions, however I do not know if I should be going through these."

Horner stated "there may be something else" available as an option to Red Bull for 2016, although Mateschitz denied rumours of the team being sold to Renault.
Which is quoted from the same interview where he slams Renault and denies any involvement next year.

I'm sorry to say, but you've showed nothing that points to a case in favour of either a Renault unbranded supply or a Renault platform to develop from. Rather you've shown possibilities, but that's not the same at all.
2. Relative to queries that ponder possibility, I have very little interest in the answer to the question, "will they or won't they?" Matters of psyche are generally too messy for me, because they seem to inevitably boil down to stuff like this...
I only bother with the question "will they or won't they". I really don't care about possibilities. There's always the possibility Red Bull will fly us to Mars, but I don't bother with that either. I acknowledge that there's always a possibility. I even admit that I might put it down excagerated that Red Bull is not in position to build their own PU. Unlimited capital can do miracles. But reasonably, I can't see it happen.

We'll see. Maybe Matechitz has a spur of the moment and throws out next year's profit in favour of their own engine after all. Always possible, but if there's a window for it, it's closing down rapidly. Let's not forget that the PU is not the only issue. They need to know what they need for cooling solutions, and how all of this influences the chassis. Basically the whole car is a question mark as long as there is no assurance on what engine they'll be getting. If they are able to do it, we'll be facing a very horrid car in terms of chassis and PU next year (which I know you accept yourself).
#AeroFrodo

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Re: Infiniti Red Bull Racing 2015

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Turbo, to be specific... which rumours did Illien deny?
JET set