bonjon1979 wrote:You can't make unlimited reliability upgrades. There is a homologation date, after that some changes are permitted on a reliability but most of them have to be agreed with the other teams.
For sure, but when it comes to ancillaries, even though they are much more integrated into the concept of a 'power unit', i think we will see plenty of leniency there, and this appears to be what they are having a problem with at the moment.
bonjon1979 wrote:There's no evidence that they have chosen a more aggressive, 'performance-orientated approach'. If they had, then perhaps we could expect to see some blistering one lap pace but no longevity. We have evidence of neither.
Not yet

. I'm just willing to give an engine builder with 12 world championship titles to its name, including 6 of the last 9, the benefit of the doubt

. Plus, if you can get your engine to win 4 times in a row in a Newey-led car, you have to be fairly good at building something reliable - he doesn't take it easy on the mechanicals

.
danielk wrote:The problem is Renault have no idea how well their engine performs .... well we can add more here and add more there.
This is very true, it's definitely not a good situation for them to be in; I'm just pondering why they find themselves here.
danielk wrote:You seem to be implying that the Renault engine has the best performance and thats why its breaking down. nothing ive seen so far convinces me of this. Indeed it could be the case but right now all weve seen is renaults going round well off the pace or breaking down, we havent seen them use the performance you talk of.
I'm not implying they have the best performance. I'm just invoking the very fundamental relationship between risk and reward. A miscalculated risk is a possible explanation of their present situation. If they have taken such risks, it is then plausible that they were doing it for some kind of reward. Perhaps a reward yet to be reaped, but will be through the coming seasons.
Their issues appear to stem from packaging; heat where it shouldn't be. They have not adequately replicated the running environment in their testing. We know what a priority Red Bull places on packaging, so it's almost unsurprising that if there were going to be issues, they would stem from being overly ambitious there. That's the (misguided) basis for my optimism regarding their package, but i'm not averse to being completely wrong

. They could have simply made a stupid mistake. Maybe I just want to believe they've been overly ambitious instead of awful

. Their history would indicate ambition, the current reality indicates awful. We shall soon see which it develops into!