venkyhere wrote: ↑17 Jan 2026, 17:25
f1isgood wrote: ↑17 Jan 2026, 01:20
All news seems to be so far positive from Red Bull side of things. Let's hope they have some clever ideas and a good aerodynamic platform to start a budget-capped engine and aero era.
Nice car livery as well.
There is one thing and one thing only, that matters for the first 5-6 races (first 1/4 of the season) :
how good is the fuel, and how reliable is the engine, relatively to the rest of the grid. Lap time performance doesn't matter, what matters most is reliability - otherwise it will be a return to the Renault PU 'nightmare'.
There is no need to get into the rat race, against 'traditional engine manufacturers', right at the start. 2026 will be a success, if the car is a winnable one, post summer break. If that means Max doesn't finish P1/P2 in the WDC, and contract clause activation, so be it. Max is smart enough to not activate the clause if by the end of the year, he has a cluster of wins over the second half. Yes, the way Mekies is talking to the media, it's a case of underpromise and overdeliver, but I wouldn't be surprised if Max finishes P6-P7 over the first 4-5 races. It's fine.
I would be lying if I said I don't have higher expectations. I don't expect Red Bull to come out dominating but I also don't expect them to be fourth fastest. I still think the only thing Red Bull lack with respect to traditional engine manufacturers is the resources from other parts of the company that maybe useful but nothing other than that.
After all, if they decided to stop providing with Mercedes inside information and moved all the current HPP staff to a new factory and made them make an engine, would you expect them to produce a dud? I think they would still make a quality engine. It's ultimately the processes and the people.
This season will reveal a lot about the quality of the engine department - especially in the quality of staff in their ability to work together. If they got very good people to work together well at RBPT there is no reason to expect them to be behind any traditional engine manufacturers. The investment is massive, and there are serious upsides with a new factory among other things.
You have to be fighting for a title with a driver like Verstappen. Post summer break wins will not be enough like we saw in 2025 unless the car actually becomes outright best at development by Spa.
I don't think this project will ever be a case of Renault era mismanagement. Renault were, to put it mildly, unserious.
Edit: Good point about the fuel. Could be a big factor.....
The FIA folds on a royal flush.