Alonso will veto that oneFoxHound wrote:
Ferrari could be a short term alternative, and while this may appear far fetched, there has been a bit of a love in between the 2 teams, almost in unison against Red Bull.

Alonso will veto that oneFoxHound wrote:
Ferrari could be a short term alternative, and while this may appear far fetched, there has been a bit of a love in between the 2 teams, almost in unison against Red Bull.
Is this pure speculation or are there some facts to back this up?munudeges wrote:They are always going to be at a serious disadvantage in that relationship
If you add that AMuS reported a potential F1 project at Porsche's new Weissach motor sport facility we could be looking at a completely new situation.FoxHound wrote:I just read on racecarengineering.com that "Honda insiders" confirm there is a 1.6 litre v6 turbo knocking about.
marcush. wrote:Porsche (read VW) as a RedBull supplier ? Has Porsche the engine designer needed and do they have the knowledge available in Weissach to do a competitive F1 powertrain'?
The most advanced engine of the last years surely was the DI spyderRS engine...the angry engine as it was called in the US
Was this really a top of the line product ? they competed with Judd ,HPD(Acura) back then and Audi ,of course.Audi has only Diesel expertise even if they have run v6 layouts in Sportscars for a good 2 years now...
I´m not convinced.
mmmmmmmmm, you are not correct.Raptor22 wrote:VAG has continually said they do not wish to participate in a cash spend war so it clear that they don't see much marketing value in F1, whereas Renault and Mercedes do.
Again, I have to disagree. I once read an interview of a top F1 engine designer and he said the efficiency of the current engines are pretty close to maximum given the existing set of regulations, direct injection or not. To achieve any further sizable gains will require something quite radical like what Mercedes, Ilmor, (sorry, Seijakessen) was toying with in the early 2000's before the Renault engine guys got wind of the rotary valve system Mercedes (sorry again, Seijakessen) was running on the test-bench and went to Max Mosley. The rest was history.Raptor22 wrote:If you're talking competition engines you're very much mistaken. VW, specifically Audi is responsible for the range of DI petrol engines, also used at Le Mans earlier this century. Their DI engine technology is acknowledged as top of the pile. The expertise is within the group. Its just a matter of how serious they are and what budget the y allocate to the devleopment of an F1 powertrain.
The engine configuration has little bearing on the expertise available
Not necessarily. BMW in 2000 - 2001 was an example of how a manufacturer can take F1 by storm by there in house research and development. BMW were even making the castings for the Williams gearbox by 2002.wunderkind wrote: The engine performance gains are all coming from better lubrication, cooling, and pushing the materials much harder than before. These are all stuffs that cannot be attained straight away for any new entrant even one as formidable as VW-Audi-Porsche. Even with the minimum engine weight regulation, there are still much scope to lighten all the reciprocating mass within the engine. The designers will just make the bottom part of the engine block heavier to meet the minimum weight requirement.
F1 is as chaise as engine dependent that success cannot be guaranteed. VAG can enter as a engine builder or manufacturer, either way success is not guaranteed (unless they could have bought Ferrari in 2000)What VW means is that, they'd want to know for certain that the money spent will be commensurate to the success. That is, if they outspend everyone body, they want to know for sure that they will win the championship. This is the way the VW executives think and they will only enter F1 on that basis. They will outspend Mercedes, Ferrari, and Renault to win if they have to.
I would be surprised if an early termination would cost Merc any money. All reports agree that McLaren are paying customer prices. Both parties probably have options. But paying them a penalty is an unlikely one in my view.wunderkind wrote:If the reports are true, I say Mercedes must be glad McLaren is initiating the breakup. It would otherwise cost Mercedes a few million to terminate the relationship early.
I just cannot see McLaren winning the championship in the next two to four years.
Ron Dennis used to say Ferrari was on their fifth year of their three year plan to win the championship. I now wonder if McLaren is going down the same path.
As for the Honda engine, what happens if Bernie and LdM get their way and keep the V8s for a few more years? Honda doesn't have a current spec V8 lying around somewhere do they? If you think along these lines, I doubt McLaren is initiating a breakup and Honda will probably not enter F1 until the engine formula is set in stone.