Seanspeed wrote: ↑24 Feb 2025, 12:15
Emag wrote: ↑24 Feb 2025, 10:47
It’s a statement of a contract signed by both parties but okay, you can keep thinking its PR bullshit as if Mercedes gains anything “lying” to cover McLaren’s ass.
Also, no team is in “full-control” of the power unit design. The power unit is prioritised. Nobody will severely handicap the engine for more bodywork freedom in this era. Early-Honda proved that it is not worth it.
On top of that, these power units have largely been the same for a long while now. Partly because of the frozen regulations, but primarily because the formula is near perfect. Gains are marginal and come with very minor physical differences to the unit.
A customer team nowadays has almost zero disadvantage to the works team and they have no excuses or anyone to blame but themselves if at the very least they don’t match the pace of the works team.
We have no idea what that contract actually says. And they aren't saying it's a complete lie, they are just saying that the degree to which any sharing is happening is still unlikely to have Mclaren on complete equal footing with the factory team in this area. It's not an unreasonable suggestion at all, and frankly I think you'd have to be naive to believe otherwise.
And obviously this is all going to be a lot more relevant to NEXT year, as has been pointed out already.
No they don’t have equal footing, but they wouldn’t say McLaren has some input on the design phase if that wasn’t true to some degree, which what the guy was denying.
In any case, this was McLaren’s best choice. They get one of the power units which will likely be close to the best, if not the best, while also having more input than a normal customer.
They considered RBPT for a short while, but RBPT is way too inexperienced and I doubt they will be competitive in 2026, whereas a Ferrari-powered McLaren will never happen.
The only other option was to develop it themselves like RedBull, but it’s too late for that. It could be a consideration for the next reg cycle, assuming McLaren keeps an upward trend.