Juzh wrote: ↑29 Jun 2018, 14:47
ognjent wrote: ↑29 Jun 2018, 10:00
Juzh wrote: ↑27 Jun 2018, 16:14
High revving renault of 2006 was fine, rev limited renault of 2007-2013 was garbage. They also failed to capitalise on "reliability" upgrades during engine freeze, which ultimately led to ferrari and mercedes running away in performance department. Their reliability was by far the worst, to the point it was getting ridicioulus at stages (the alternator of 2012 fiasco).
Brundle is a dinasour stuck in the days gone by. Double kers and drs will make any car look fast in barcelona straight. Yes, 2012 lotus was fast on the straights in some races, and a dog in others. Their 2013 car was better despite it losing a lot of straight line speed in the process.
Forget Brundle (although he very much knows what he is talking about), but Adrian Newey also disagrees wiith you (key words: blown diffuser).
Anyway, just as a reminder - Williams won their only race in the last 14 years with a Renault engine. Besides, do you know how many engine related DNF's Vettel had in those 4 years? The total of 2 in 4 years. Not bad for reliability. FFS, Kimi even set a record in number of finishes in points in a row in Lotus.
About power - if you check speed traps from those seasons you will be surprised. Lotus was always up there, RB not so much due to their high DF setups (note: of course I know that speed traps are not the outright showing of engine's power, but they are very popular these days and data is easy to find, so it's the best guess that it could be done).
To summarize - yes, Renault had a marginal less power Mercedes and Ferrari. Very slightly behind. However, that was blown out of proportion by H & M as always because they always wanted more. And that complaints are all that F1 fans will remember. Unfortunately.
Short and insufficient memory.
No, brundle does not know what he's talking about, not in the slightest. He's a former driver (like 20 years ago) with zero technical knowledge. He just calls things as he sees them, which in like 90% of cases is wrong. Imediately I can remember his blunder from hungary 2015, when kimi lost mgu-k. Brundle was talking about how he can still use mgu-h and so he hasn't lost all performance (the only thing he hasn't lost in this case was anti-lag).
Blown diffuser was all red bull. Rest of renault powered cars were nowhere after a couple of races. Renault's cold blowing was also inferior to mercedes' hot blowing (to not such a small extent). Red bull was just a better car.
Williams won because of pirelottery.
2012 alternator which failed twice in Vettel's car and another couple of times in Webber's was a renault supplied part, thus it's a part of the engine. There were numerous other engine related issues which cost them points. Denying this is just being silly.
Adrian Newey wanted mercedes engine in 2010 but couldn't get it (mclaren veto).
Sorry but that's just all wrong. Renault have been developing engines for EBD since the early 80's, they are by far the best engines for it because they are so economical they can carry less but still blow more, it was a ridiculous advantage for Red Bull to have and Newey who'd been working with Renault for EBD purposes since the 90's new how best to exploit it and he did brilliantly no doubt but it's the best EBD engine, equally no doubt, they had 30 years perfecting it.
Not just Lotus but Williams in 2012 benefited hugely from it as well but their drivers were rubbish. Not just Spain, in Singapore they were one of the best cars in opposite sides of the season with no suggestion of tyre lottery.
Ask Ferrari or Mercedes back then if they could sacrifice 15bhp for the ability to carry less fuel than rivals but still burn more off than they could and see what they tell you. It's an insane advantage for that era which is why the FIA kept trying to hobble it.
Yes they had reliability issues but only Ferrari really didn't but it was powerful but thirsty so they had to carry more fuel and burn less off. Mercedes had reliability issues but were a good halfway point between power and efficiency wise with Renault and Ferrari.
You can't split it up as 09-13 as there were regulation tweaks that played to Renault's strengths. It's more like 2009/10 you'd want Mercedes but 2011/12/13 you'd want Renault all day every day and twice on Sunday.