This is the full transcript of Newey talking about the history of Honda since 2021:
“I think, okay, the first question, a bit of history is important there,” explained the Aston Martin team principal.
“Honda pulled out at the end of 2021. They then re-entered the sport, kind of, at the end of 2022, so over roughly a year, a year and a bit, out of competition.
“When they reformed, a lot of the original group had, it now transpires, disbanded and went to work on solar panels or whatever – and so a lot of the group that reformed are actually fresh to Formula 1.”
These comments provide an altogether new insight into the mismanagement and allocation of resources at Honda. It was already common knowledge that Honda were forced to rebuild their engine department after 2021.
However, the assumption was that Honda retained many of the engineers who powered Red Bull to successive world titles. Aston Martin themselves seem to have been under this impression.
This evidently was not the case, as Newey continued to explain:
“They didn’t bring the experience that they had had previously. Plus, when they came back in 2023, that was the first year of the budget cap introduction for engines.
“So all their rivals had been developing away through ’21, ’22 with continuity, their existing team, and free of budget cap.
“They [Honda] re-entered with… I’m guessing only 30% of their original team, and now in a budget cap era. So they started very much on the back foot and unfortunately, they’ve struggled to catch back up.”
https://lastwordonsports.com/motorsport ... ar-panels/
(1) Best engineers went to go work on solar panels (or retired) after 2021
(2) Honda got caught in the budget cap which started in 2023 while other manufacturers had unlimited spending in 2021 and 2022
(3) Current team is mostly new to Formula 1.