Not sure why this is being brought up.roon wrote: ↑10 Aug 2018, 19:23Can they switch back to a Mercedes engine any time soon?
http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/McL ... 766731.jpg
Not sure why this is being brought up.roon wrote: ↑10 Aug 2018, 19:23Can they switch back to a Mercedes engine any time soon?
http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/McL ... 766731.jpg
The problem is, no new manufacturer is showing any sort of interest, such that the current 4 suppliers are saying there's no need for a radical rules change. They all want to keep the MGU-H. I don't believe BMW have any interests in F1 whatsoever. Aston Martin are all talk and no substance, they seem satisfied with just having their name on the Red Bull.Big Tea wrote: ↑10 Aug 2018, 22:43If Dennis was still there I believe he would be putting his all into bringing in a supplier, like BMW or even Hyundai.
Switching back to Mercedes would still put them behind Mercedes even if Williams or FI did not get first dibs.
At Renault, they are at least co-developing with Renault, but I do not see them being up front this decade.
There did not seem an alternative when he and Ojjah got the Porsche TAG engine. I don't think anyone else could have pulled that off.Ground Effect wrote: ↑10 Aug 2018, 23:00The problem is, no new manufacturer is showing any sort of interest, such that the current 4 suppliers are saying there's no need for a radical rules change. They all want to keep the MGU-H. I don't believe BMW have any interests in F1 whatsoever. Aston Martin are all talk and no substance, they seem satisfied with just having their name on the Red Bull.Big Tea wrote: ↑10 Aug 2018, 22:43If Dennis was still there I believe he would be putting his all into bringing in a supplier, like BMW or even Hyundai.
Switching back to Mercedes would still put them behind Mercedes even if Williams or FI did not get first dibs.
At Renault, they are at least co-developing with Renault, but I do not see them being up front this decade.
For the record:Big Tea wrote: ↑10 Aug 2018, 23:06There did not seem an alternative when he and Ojjah got the Porsche TAG engine. I don't think anyone else could have pulled that off.Ground Effect wrote: ↑10 Aug 2018, 23:00The problem is, no new manufacturer is showing any sort of interest, such that the current 4 suppliers are saying there's no need for a radical rules change. They all want to keep the MGU-H. I don't believe BMW have any interests in F1 whatsoever. Aston Martin are all talk and no substance, they seem satisfied with just having their name on the Red Bull.Big Tea wrote: ↑10 Aug 2018, 22:43If Dennis was still there I believe he would be putting his all into bringing in a supplier, like BMW or even Hyundai.
Switching back to Mercedes would still put them behind Mercedes even if Williams or FI did not get first dibs.
At Renault, they are at least co-developing with Renault, but I do not see them being up front this decade.
Ah!, Hello mr top 3 sports car makers in the world, would you make an engine for me, Oh yes, and name it after a watch
I could well be biased though, Always a big Ron fan.
TAG sponsored Formula One team Williams during the early 1980s, including when team drivers Alan Jones and Keke Rosberg won the 1980 and 1982 World Championships respectively. During the 1983 season, Mansour Ojjeh had a meeting with McLaren team boss Ron Dennis, who offered Ojjeh the chance of not just a sponsorship deal like with Williams, but having a part ownership of McLaren. Ojjeh agreed and the McLaren relationship continues to this day, with the TAG Group holding a stake in the McLaren Group.
While still a sponsor of Williams, Ojjeh financed the development of a turbocharged Porsche V6 engine for use by McLaren. The engines would be badged as TAG as Ojjeh owned the naming rights, though the engines also displayed the words "Made by Porsche".
You need to be clearer with your questions. McLaren have finished ahead of RBR in some races so technically they have beat them this year as well as being beaten by them several times.
Maybe cause they see Honda, after 5 year and spending hundreds of millions of dollars(maybe billions), are very far from Merc/Ferrari PU.
Merc stopped supplying PU to McLaren cause McLaren started building road cars or so the story goes.roon wrote: ↑10 Aug 2018, 19:23Can they switch back to a Mercedes engine any time soon?
http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/McL ... 766731.jpg