No doubt about it, Bernie made F1. But remember his job was to make money for F1. He said several times he did not like the way F1 was going, but he had his job to do.
I do feel he strung it out by maybe 5 years too long to retire though
No doubt about it, Bernie made F1. But remember his job was to make money for F1. He said several times he did not like the way F1 was going, but he had his job to do.
According to this article there is 1 upgrade allowed during the 2021 season on ICE, TC, MGU-H and oil/fuel.Wouter wrote: ↑10 Jan 2021, 21:45.
The last message I read is that Honda wants to leave RB well cared for, they now have the entire season to work on the 2022 engine, as no upgrade is allowed during this season. All those upgrades will then be incorporated into the 2022 engine, provided the FIA agrees to the engine freeze at the start of the 2022 season. Honda wants to provide SAT and RBR with the same engines for that season and beyond.
Honda Racing will leave F1 at the end of this season, but Honda Japan is willing to supply engines afterwards.
According to the latest reports, the deal is 90% closed. They have to wait for the FIA.
The "1 upgrade allowed during the 2021 season on ICE, TC, MGU-H and oil / fuel" has been applied to the 2021 engine during the winter break by each manufacturer.Alexf1 wrote: ↑12 Jan 2021, 22:49The "1 upgrade allowed during the 2021 season on ICE, TC, MGU-H and oil / fuel" has been applied to the 2021 engine during the winter break by each manufacturer.Wouter wrote: ↑10 Jan 2021, 21:45.
The last message I read is that Honda wants to leave RB well cared for, they now have the entire season to work on the 2022 engine, as no upgrade is allowed during this season. All those upgrades will then be incorporated into the 2022 engine, provided the FIA agrees to the engine freeze at the start of the 2022 season. Honda wants to provide SAT and RBR with the same engines for that season and beyond.
Honda Racing will leave F1 at the end of this season, but Honda Japan is willing to supply engines afterwards.
According to the latest reports, the deal is 90% closed. They have to wait for the FIA.
None of this was allowed to be upgraded in 2020, so they had to wait until the winter break to apply the 2021 upgrade.
According to this article there is 1 upgrade allowed during the 2021 season on ICE, TC, MGU-H and oil/fuel.
https://the-race.com/formula-1/the-full ... facturers/
I read parts of the 2022 engine would be introduced in 2021. That could also mean after the 1 allowed in-season update and the rest sold as IP.
Yes you can, but of course everyone would prefer to have a strong engine at the first race and not wait with the upgrade until mid-season. At least that doesn't seem sensible/wise to me.
https://the-race.com/formula-1/red-bull ... eze-talks/Red Bull closing on Honda engine deal with fresh freeze talks
Renewed discussions over an early Formula 1 engine development freeze mean Red Bull is closing on a deal to take over Honda’s engine from 2022 onwards.
The Race understands it [the negotiation process] is back on the agenda as of this week and at least two parties involved are believed to be confident a resolution is close.
The reason for the delay in getting this finalised is in its complexity. Rival manufacturers have been open to compromise and granting Red Bull the freeze it desires, but some fundamental positions clash.
.................................
Meanwhile, Red Bull and Honda’s negotiations are understood to have swiftly moved in a good direction and gained support from Honda in Japan, not just its F1 operation, early in the process.
They established what Red Bull wanted to request from Honda and by the end of 2020 it is believed both parties were largely in agreement, and awaiting news of whether the regulations would be changed.
The freeze was therefore the only factor holding up an engine takeover being formalised as it defined the details and practicalities that Red Bull and Honda would have to consider.
In addition to agreeing that Red Bull will take over part of Honda’s Milton Keynes facility, and expand its own Red Bull Technologies campus as well, it is expected that the takeover plan will include at least some Honda personnel remaining involved beyond 2021.
Yamamoto told The Race in December: “It is very difficult to say suddenly goodbye in the opening race in Melbourne, in 2022, practically.
I think they will need some kind of support. I’m not sure the length, or how much. But we will support somehow.”
So just to get this straight, there's no in-season updates allowed (provided you took new engine before season start), same as in 2020?
Juzh wrote: ↑14 Jan 2021, 12:50So just to get this straight, there's no in-season updates allowed (provided you took new engine before season start), same as in 2020?
Where do you have this from? Last time I checked the rules you can start the 2021 season with a totally new PU and upgrade it once throughout the season.Wouter wrote: ↑14 Jan 2021, 13:19
If you upgrade the engine after the 2020 season (so during the winter break), you may not upgrade anything during the season.
If you start the season with the unchanged 2020 engine, you may upgrade a number of parts once during the 2021 season.
LM10 wrote: ↑14 Jan 2021, 14:08.
Where do you have this from? Last time I checked the rules you can start the 2021 season with a totally new PU and upgrade it once throughout the season.
That looks, to me, that you declare your 2021 homologated parts, then get 1 deviation from that standard during the year. So, all-new 2021 designs, and 1 update to each part allowed (effectively allowing a Spec2).Wouter wrote: ↑14 Jan 2021, 14:49
https://cdn.the-race.com/wp-content/upl ... /image.png
Could you show me those rules please? I cannot find them. Thanks.
Unfortunately I've also not found any official ruling. What I meant by "checked the rules" was that I had read them on racefans.net back then in May.Wouter wrote: ↑14 Jan 2021, 14:49
https://cdn.the-race.com/wp-content/upl ... /image.png
Could you show me those rules please? I cannot find them. Thanks.
I am confused now, but I think you are right. ".... to make to the homologation of parts [of 2022]."LM10 wrote: ↑14 Jan 2021, 18:10Unfortunately I've also not found any official ruling. What I meant by "checked the rules" was that I had read them on racefans.net back then in May.Wouter wrote: ↑14 Jan 2021, 14:49
https://cdn.the-race.com/wp-content/upl ... /image.png
Could you show me those rules please? I cannot find them. Thanks.
But seems like the graph you sent is from the-race.com and it says the same like racefans. So I guess that should be correct more or less.
And how I interpret this is as follows:
New PU to start the seasons 2021, 2022 and 2023 + one in-season change to ICE, turbo and MGU-H each. As for MGU-K, CE and ES only one change each in the periods 2020-2021 and 2022-2023.
So these numbers show the amount of changes manufacturers will be permitted to make to the homologation of parts.