SectorOne wrote:you mean like when Mclaren used to wipe the floor with Mercedes for two whole years in the V8 days?
3 years
SectorOne wrote:you mean like when Mclaren used to wipe the floor with Mercedes for two whole years in the V8 days?
It will never happen.SectorOne wrote:Oh, yea my bad.
But hopefully someone will bring at least something that can be considered evidence for this claim.
I've yet to see any unfortunately.
It is quite telling that RBR or any other team for that matter have not protested the difference in spec between the Mercedes and their customer teams, That's all the evidence I need that this claim is desperate grasping at straws.SectorOne wrote:Oh, yea my bad.
But hopefully someone will bring at least something that can be considered evidence for this claim.
I've yet to see any unfortunately.
As a customer, what is the feedback you get from Mercedes? Surely they are working on a lot of things specific to their package.
"It's not particularly specific. Because all the hardware has to be the same all the base mapping will be very similar. There might be a little bit of individual tuning we do for our own cars but I'm very happy with the way we work with them."
- Pat Symonds, March 7th.
Read more at http://en.espnf1.com/williams/motorspor ... ud5DMPV.99
Indeed. It is important to point out a very simple fact - only four teams have right now the ressources to develop the best chassis. Over the arc of the season this becomes generally more visible since a longer development phase means the effect of those ressources becomes more pronnounced. The diminishing marginal returns on the chassis side, the relatively small impact of engine performance and bans never allowed a single team to pull far ahead for long.Phil wrote:Lets not get too sidetracked about what costumer teams are achieving to either proclaim the Mercedes power unit to be substantially ahead or not. Lets take a look at who those customer teams are:
Williams struggled quite a bit the year before, so their budget was probably quite limited for 2014. In 2013 when engine performance was more or less equal and aero/chassis more important, Mercedes was good, Williams and Force India were way down in the midfield. So was McLaren too, who again in 2014 (and probably also due to the fact that they were leaving, so very limited inside to the power unit itself) struggled on the aero/chassis side. So while Mercedes clearly has the best chassis among the teams that run Mercedes power units, it's not exactly as if the customer teams are in the same league budget wise as their main rivals (Redbull + Ferrari + Mercedes).
I think there's a bit of a difference between comparing a battery (essentially a spec part that is messured by a few simple attributes) and an engine, that costs millions and is a substantial part of the car that a team gets and builds in. It's not something they can change from race to race either. Most engine deals are likely very complex too, not just on a year-by-year cycling contract. If it was, then I'd probably be expecting more teams to want a Mercedes PU. But the McLaren situation proves that it's not like that this (McLaren I hear wanted a one-year contract for 2015 to allow Honda more time, but didn't get it).Andres125sx wrote:@Phil
Your argumentation about engines are not built by the team so the team can´t do anything to reduce the gap is right, but that´s how racing works. If we start that route, then we could say the same with any other part of the car
F1 teams don´t build batteries, they don´t refine their own fuel and looks like that is a huge factor wich harmed McLaren in 2014, they don´t build brakes either...
I'm not arguing in RedBulls favour, so the talk about hyprocicy or arrogance is lost on me. Even if you are right, it doesn't invalidate the points they make IMO.FoxHound wrote:The issue at large is that the engine needs to be a differentiator. Why should it not be? Aero has dominated for years, and greasy oily bits have had to take a back seat.
My overall impression of Red Bull is that they feel they have a divine right to win.
Renault is in the way of that, not the rules.
Renault will sort their problems, I have faith they will anyway. The only problem is that nobody knows when.
And this is motivating Red Bull to pressure the FIA into a change that suits them. Impatience allied to astonishing arrogance.
RBR is free to build their own engines. If they don´t want to and prefer to use other´s engine, they assume engine perfomance is not dependant on them.Phil wrote:I think there's a bit of a difference between comparing a battery (essentially a spec part that is messured by a few simple attributes) and an engine, that costs millions and is a substantial part of the car that a team gets and builds in. It's not something they can change from race to race either. Most engine deals are likely very complex too, not just on a year-by-year cycling contract. If it was, then I'd probably be expecting more teams to want a Mercedes PU. But the McLaren situation proves that it's not like that this (McLaren I hear wanted a one-year contract for 2015 to allow Honda more time, but didn't get it).Andres125sx wrote:@Phil
Your argumentation about engines are not built by the team so the team can´t do anything to reduce the gap is right, but that´s how racing works. If we start that route, then we could say the same with any other part of the car
F1 teams don´t build batteries, they don´t refine their own fuel and looks like that is a huge factor wich harmed McLaren in 2014, they don´t build brakes either...
They aren´t, situation is exactly as you hope it to be.Phil wrote:What we need is the situation where the engine can be a differentiator, but can be leveled by chassis/aero. Essentially meaning that the engines need to be closer in performance among suppliers, so that aero/chassis can be more revelant. If the engines are too big a factor, it's like the tyre era all over again where being on the wrong tyre ment you lose out irregardless how well you designed your car.
This topic isn't about RedBull or Mercedes, it's about comparing a formula in which the engine plays a significant role, to a formula where aero/chassis is the prevailing factor. Essentially, we could pick Sauber, Torro Rosso, or any other team who does not have the expertise or resources to build their own competitive engine. The only reason why we have engine manufacturers in F1 is because they are supplying more than a single team; because the R&D that went into these new engines are substantial, so splitting it among multiple customers makes the effort whortwhile. It being somewhat road-relevant also helps, which is why we have Honda joining in light of the new V6 turbos.Andres125sx wrote:RBR is free to build their own engines. If they don´t want to and prefer to use other´s engine, they assume engine perfomance is not dependant on them.
Now crying because the engine is not as they´d like it to be is childish.
Please let us have a discussion without using a straw man questions. Nobody in the last posts questioned the quality of the Mercedes chassis nor it's importance on that smashing performance...Andres125sx wrote:Or you think Mercedes advantage is only due to the PU?
Indeed. Personally I post in this part of the forum even more rarely then overall. However personally I think the topic highlights one of the biggest puzzles the sport faces and merits much attention.Phil wrote: I am yet to hear any arguments on how an engine dominated formula is different to one when we were to have different tyre suppliers and tyres end up being the biggest performance differentiator. How is this different to teams with hundreds of employees who's expertise is in building cars (not tyres or engines), but in the end are reduced to the competitiveness of the tyre they have to run (or in today's sense, the engine through the contracts they signed)?
Aero has had it good for too many years, Phil.Phil wrote:.....
Maybe my poor english is the cause, but I´d say this statement does imply Mercedes engine is so much better to their competitors that they can´t level that difference with aero/chasisH2H wrote:Please let us have a discussion without using a straw man questions. Nobody in the last posts questioned the quality of the Mercedes chassis nor it's importance on that smashing performance...Andres125sx wrote:Or you think Mercedes advantage is only due to the PU?
Wich IMO is far from accurate, so no straw man questions, but fair argumentation. Looks like FoxHound think the same, so I guess it´s not my englishPhil wrote:What we need is the situation where the engine can be a differentiator, but can be leveled by chassis/aero. Essentially meaning that the engines need to be closer in performance among suppliers, so that aero/chassis can be more revelant.
Because it´s not different, but this is how racing works.Phil wrote:I am yet to hear any arguments on how an engine dominated formula is different to one when we were to have different tyre suppliers and tyres end up being the biggest performance differentiator. How is this not relevant to teams with hundreds of employees who's expertise is in building cars (not tyres or engines), but in the end are reduced to the competitiveness of the tyre they have to run (or in today's sense, the engine through the contracts they signed)?