The bit I bolded gives me a bit of a laughManoah2u wrote: ↑07 Dec 2017, 12:23Mclaren will beat Toro Rosso without effort. Their chassis is fantastic, and how could it not, they have much more to spend and much more knowledge to put in their car so it'll technically be better in every way, then Mclaren has ALONSO as a driver with VanDoorne. Toro rosso has Gasly and Hartley. Both as talented and promising as the bark of a tree. the final wildcard is the engine. If Honda takes on where they left last year, then TR is gonna be seriously far to the back. The Renault engine is a good stable engine and will bring Mclaren towards the front of the midfield atleast, perhaps even a fight against RB. TR has no chance.
UNLESS for some reason the Honda engine is going to be absolute mad props crazy strong and fast, which i'm sure won't be the case. If it is, they'll dance around everybody.
tok-tokkie wrote: ↑07 Dec 2017, 12:12To me McLaren is following in Williams footsteps. It is to be a Renault customer team. It will be confined to the mid-field customer teams. May start as the best of the mid field. Becoming a customer team has excluded them from being constructor champions and thus a bad decision. Only hope is if FIA can force engine parity.
Toro Rosso will become the Honda works team. And that is just the prelude before Red Bull becomes the Honda works team. Next year Toro Rosso will have both Honda & Red Bull on their side.
Yes pleasetok-tokkie wrote: ↑07 Dec 2017, 12:12To me McLaren is following in Williams footsteps. It is to be a Renault customer team. It will be confined to the mid-field customer teams. May start as the best of the mid field. Becoming a customer team has excluded them from being constructor champions and thus a bad decision. Only hope is if FIA can force engine parity.
Toro Rosso will become the Honda works team. And that is just the prelude before Red Bull becomes the Honda works team. Next year Toro Rosso will have both Honda & Red Bull on their side.
Two Redbull teams with Honda engines for 2019 is a interesting notion. Could be a new record for grid penalties in a season.tok-tokkie wrote: ↑07 Dec 2017, 12:12To me McLaren is following in Williams footsteps. It is to be a Renault customer team. It will be confined to the mid-field customer teams. May start as the best of the mid field. Becoming a customer team has excluded them from being constructor champions and thus a bad decision. Only hope is if FIA can force engine parity.
Toro Rosso will become the Honda works team. And that is just the prelude before Red Bull becomes the Honda works team. Next year Toro Rosso will have both Honda & Red Bull on their side.
I think there’s a reason why Mercedes wouldn’t supply mclaren (or Red Bull) but are happy with Williams.tok-tokkie wrote: ↑07 Dec 2017, 12:12To me McLaren is following in Williams footsteps. It is to be a Renault customer team. It will be confined to the mid-field customer teams. May start as the best of the mid field. Becoming a customer team has excluded them from being constructor champions and thus a bad decision. Only hope is if FIA can force engine parity.
Toro Rosso will become the Honda works team. And that is just the prelude before Red Bull becomes the Honda works team. Next year Toro Rosso will have both Honda & Red Bull on their side.
It was a completely different crew in 2013 that included Paddy Lowe. In 2014 the kitchen cupboards were bare after many of the people moved to Merc. It was a rebuilding year for McLaren. Really 2015, was the first full year of the present structure/personnel.wesley123 wrote: ↑22 Sep 2017, 10:29I place my bets on Toro Rosso.
Honda got all the blame of the last 3 years for McLarens misfortunes, but you can't really ignore how much they sucked in 2014, with Mercedes engine, which was relatively much, much better than the rest of the engines compared to now when Ferrari is much closer.
Or how much they sucked in 2013. They have taken a downturn since 2009, where they were pretty much only competitive because of neat tricks like the F-duct or coanda exhaust.
And they now replace their Honda engine with an engine that is only slightly less worse. I don't see McLAren being competitive in 2018.
From those that I have spoken to that work in F1, they rate STR as the best place to work because of their team culture.
I'm not saying they aren't a nice team, but considering their resources McLaren should be miles ahead of them, even with Red Bull support.
That's not true ...they've changed the rulesRedNEO wrote: ↑07 Dec 2017, 17:42Two Redbull teams with Honda engines for 2019 is a interesting notion. Could be a new record for grid penalties in a season.tok-tokkie wrote: ↑07 Dec 2017, 12:12To me McLaren is following in Williams footsteps. It is to be a Renault customer team. It will be confined to the mid-field customer teams. May start as the best of the mid field. Becoming a customer team has excluded them from being constructor champions and thus a bad decision. Only hope is if FIA can force engine parity.
Toro Rosso will become the Honda works team. And that is just the prelude before Red Bull becomes the Honda works team. Next year Toro Rosso will have both Honda & Red Bull on their side.