At that point, I'm assuming, RedBull still had high hopes of a better 2015 season after Abiteboul raised high hopes back in late January on engine progress:James Allen wrote:Since the end of last year, Renault has been evaluating its options in F1 with three possibilities: stay as they are as a supplier, withdraw from F1 or take over a team and run as Renault again.
A board meeting took place in December and further meetings are planned as they move towards a decision. In the meantime it is known that they are evaluating which team would be suitable for a takeover.
History I guess showed us that it wasn't to be, which I think give a little context to the criticism that resulted coming off a horrendous Melbourne Grand Prix weekend, where they already lost an engine out of the 4 available.James Allen wrote:Renault says it has made “fundamental changes” to its power unit in a bid to close the gap on Mercedes in 2015, with the manufacturer’s Managing Director Cyril Abiteboul saying “we believe we have made a very big step in performance and will be more reliable”.
“We knew what we had to do over the winter and we know what we have achieved,” said Abiteboul. “We do not know where the others will be: we may not have erased all the gaps, but we are confident that we have gone a long way to making up the deficit of last season. Our objective is to close the gap as much as possible and give Red Bull Racing and Scuderia Toro Rosso a more competitive car on most circuits, independently of their characteristics and sensitivities.”
Phil wrote:You're right, criticizing your supplier and partner is not the best way to strengthen a partnership. I'm a bit unsure though what came first though - them criticizing or Renault scouting around for a team to buy; According to James Allen in an article dating back to March 7th (before the start of the season), it seems Renault was already contemplating various options as far back as even 2014...
And just for fun...crash.net, July 1, 2014 wrote:Christian Horner says Red Bull has engine options for 2016 having been unhappy with the current performance of Renault.
Following a disappointing Austrian Grand Prix, Horner was scathing in his criticism of Renault as Daniel Ricciardo finished eighth and Sebastian Vettel retired following reliability issues. While Horner wants to see Renault recover, he admits Red Bull already knows it will not be short of choice when its current deal expires at the end of next season.
"The thing about a team like Red Bull is we always have options, and I'm not going to disclose what they are here,” Horner said. "We want to run at the front, we want to be competitive, and in order to be competitive we have to have a sensible power unit."
It had to be a dour day at the Horner home after news of the Volkswagen scandal broke.NBC Sports, September 25, 2015 wrote:“Of course it’s not an ideal situation,” Horner said. “I’m working hard to try and find a solution, and hopefully there will be a solution in the coming weeks but it’s quite simple. If we don’t get an engine, we can’t push the car.
When asked if we could safely assume it would not be provided by Volkswagen, Horner wryly said: “That seemed to go up in smoke.”
So if RBR is only getting the ICE and not the turbocharger (as it's supposedly not ready yet, despite this upgrade being available 2 races ago), does that lend any credence to the TJ13 rumor and perhaps Renault are keeping their "new" turbocharger for themselves as that's not an item that will be shared between the two companies next year?Thunders wrote:Apparently not all of the Update is Ready:
https://twitter.com/janci1612/status/664842091638480896
did RedBull thank Renault for their success?WilliamsF1 wrote:Wonder why Renault never thanked Red Bull for the successes between 2010-2013?
Rumour was they overheated because of Newey tight design's cooling capabilities.Manoah2u wrote:did RedBull thank Renault for their success?WilliamsF1 wrote:Wonder why Renault never thanked Red Bull for the successes between 2010-2013?
i quite recall Renault being allowed to modify their v8 because it 'lacked' in some aspects compared the competition....
something i think is interesting though is that Renaults 'problems' begain with RedBull on alternators on their PU. iirc it was magneti marelli alternators. if im right, their ERS is magneti marelli. is the entire Renault problem due to magneti marelli?
surely can't be that simple right?
I'm not exactly sure what you're trying to say here. From my perspective, it seems apparent that Red Bull had little intention of moving forward with Renault after the team somehow convinced Audi to enter the picture. Those rumors seriously picked up steam around May of 2014; Horner started mentioning his undisclosed future 2016 partner as early as July of that year; and Domenicali started in Ingolstadt that November.Phil wrote:My mistake; I should have clarified; When I was talking about criticism, I was referring to the kind that subsequently lead to the complete breakdown of that partnership where both parties deemed that working together for another year would be out of the question...
While it's obviously a bit more self-serving than a pure "thank you" tends to be, I gotta think the $30,000,000 Infiniti sponsorship expressed quite a bit of gratitude, no?WilliamsF1 wrote:Wonder why Renault never thanked Red Bull for the successes between 2010-2013?
"rumour" heh?NL_Fer wrote:Rumour was they overheated because of Newey tight design's cooling capabilities.Manoah2u wrote:did RedBull thank Renault for their success?WilliamsF1 wrote:Wonder why Renault never thanked Red Bull for the successes between 2010-2013?
i quite recall Renault being allowed to modify their v8 because it 'lacked' in some aspects compared the competition....
something i think is interesting though is that Renaults 'problems' begain with RedBull on alternators on their PU. iirc it was magneti marelli alternators. if im right, their ERS is magneti marelli. is the entire Renault problem due to magneti marelli?
surely can't be that simple right?
If the turbo story is through, is Renault basicly running the 2014 pu, with a new Ice? What is happening in Viry Chattilon?
THE Consensus Here and Most of the English Press is that Red Bull forgot to tHank Renault. So it must be true.Manoah2u wrote:did RedBull thank Renault for their success?WilliamsF1 wrote:Wonder why Renault never thanked Red Bull for the successes between 2010-2013?
Wow 7 years.After pleading guilty during a previous trial at Guildford Crown Court, the quartet, aged between 24 and 41, have now been sentenced to between two and seven years in jail.
Didn't ecclestone said a month or so back that Red Bull back then found a solution? I think it would be correct to say they found a possible solution, which is not set in stone yet.Renault's F1 managing director Cyril Abiteboul said: "What I think is fair to say is that Red Bull has found a solution. We will confirm to what extent that involves Renault, but the first thing we need to decide is our involvement in F1.