Could Mclaren compete in a world championship on its own without its actual
partner (mercedes), thus producing its own engine, in the near future?
+1 Good post. This is a VERY interesting topic.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:McLaren produce its own engines? [-X
Not a rats chance in hell.
McLaren have leveraged themselves by producing the MP4-12C, and it will need to sell well for a good few years before McLaren see any return on their investments.
On top of this to actually buy an existing or build a new Engine division would be heinously expensive. Prohibitively so and it will be at the expense of their F1 car design division, McLaren F1.
Then there is the the very real possibilty that the engines turn out to be no good or merely average. This is exactly why McLaren, for all their intentions of being Ferrari wannabe's, cannot justify spending hundreds of millions to get what they currently do for a fraction of the cost.
And its also no coincidence that prior to Mercedes involvement, McLaren floundered with Peugeot and Ford after the Honda glory days. So their standing has also got a lot to do with the Mercedes-Benz partnership, be it financial or technical.
How they stand up once Mercedes have fully severed ties will be the acid test.
The waters get deeper and murkier as a big fish.....
A bit like the Ilmor, sorry, Mercedes F1 engines then...JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote: So no, Mclaren are not directly responsible for the engine although in all fairness they have paid for it.
McLaren could buy Cosworth for a little over $100 million, split the company for PR purposes, and have a McLaren engine on the grid the next year.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:McLaren produce its own engines? [-X
Not a rats chance in hell.
McLaren have leveraged themselves by producing the MP4-12C, and it will need to sell well for a good few years before McLaren see any return on their investments.
On top of this to actually buy an existing or build a new Engine division would be heinously expensive. Prohibitively so and it will be at the expense of their F1 car design division, McLaren F1.
Then there is the the very real possibilty that the engines turn out to be no good or merely average. This is exactly why McLaren, for all their intentions of being Ferrari wannabe's, cannot justify spending hundreds of millions to get what they currently do for a fraction of the cost.
And its also no coincidence that prior to Mercedes involvement, McLaren floundered with Peugeot and Ford after the Honda glory days. So their standing has also got a lot to do with the Mercedes-Benz partnership, be it financial or technical.
How they stand up once Mercedes have fully severed ties will be the acid test.
The waters get deeper and murkier as a big fish.....