There has been a lot of talk of teams making do during 2008 and concentrating their efforts on 2009 with the belief that the fundamental rule changes will level the field. But, after past rule changes there was never a major reshuffling of the pack, the top teams before the rule changes stayed at the top and even when they messed up their new car designs, after developing and modified them to suit they again quickly rose to the top.
So come 2009 Ferrari and Mclaren will still be at the top.
Regarding the schools of thought for the development approach, incremental (keep building on a solid base) or big-bang (a quantum leap and then try to get it all working), don’t know what is best. I suppose it depends on works best for your team.
Big bang failed for Mclaren in 2004, but what they learnt and by developing what had, it has put them in a strong position ever since. It will be interesting to see what happens this year with Red Bull, big leap last year and reliability problems but towards the end of last year they were getting on top of it and running near the front. And then again, Toyota incremental approach sees them making some progress only to slip back as the other teams make greater advances.
Back to Honda, if anyone can get Honda to the top it will be Ross Brawn and agree with mx_tifosi
mx_tifosi wrote:
Right now I don't know how to put it all into words, but it's what Ross Brawn referred to many times over. Basically that Honda have to "regroup" and get their minds straight on how they are going to advance together as a team, instead of just throwing bits and pieces at the car to see if it just might "work" this time around. And its exactly this that might possibly get Honda on its feet once and for all, because I can't say that they will get BACK on their feet, since I don't think they ever were.
Honda need stability, time to re-group and stop to fire-fighting in the hope and what they throw onto the car will work.