Giblet wrote: ↑26 Feb 2018, 16:27
Anthropolyte wrote: ↑26 Feb 2018, 16:09
There were discussions over the last couple of years about who was most at fault - McLaren for enforcing a design, or Honda for designing a poor engine.
McLaren is not an engine maker. They asked their new engine maker if they could do a size zero engine. The engine maker said "yes, we can make a size zero engine for you".
They couldn't. This was not Ron asking, Honda saying "No we can't don that", then Ron forcing them to do it anyways.
The blame lies on Honda.
What you just successfully described would be a customer/supplier relationship. However, McLaren Honda had a
partnership. In other words, McLaren and Honda sat together and came up with ideas on what the best "package" would/should/could be. That was the whole point of it.
McLaren, responsible for the chassis and aerodynamics, naturally wants everything as tight as possible. But nothing is without compromise, so creating the best possible engine would perhaps not allow the best aero efficient car and vice-versa. So in the end, it comes down to trade-off. In the end, it just didn't work out, but as with all partnerships, you can't blame one without blaming the other. There were two equal partners involved here, not one.