ME4ME wrote: ↑12 Jun 2017, 18:00
What really, REALLY annoys me is this:
"Frankly the next big upgrade will be next year. Then we will have a completely new concept. That will make a difference - but as I said 2018."
They already had their big concept change this year. That's their only excuse for all the unreliability issues they're currently having.
- They have failed to close the performance gap to Mercedes
- They have turned a reliable unit into a unreliable one
- They are going for another concept next year, which will likely introduce further unreliability
While performance is just no where near where it should be with RBR finishing on average over 40 seconds behind the leader(excluding Monaco from that number because, Monaco), is it unreliable?
RBR have had failures yet have still used only 2 of each engine part same now as everyone else. Max's car stopped but with no electrical power, it's not necessarily a Renault failure. Even back in 2014 RBR had far more failures in testing than the smaller Renault teams, many of them electrical same way some of Honda's failures have been electrical but their own car rather than the engine.
The renault using teams aren't using significantly more engines than anyone else nor more than last year at the same point are they?
Like I said though, the performance is no where near where it needs to be. With news out of Renault that no major updates to 2018, it's hard to see where or how any Renault teams will make a big step through the rest of this year.
I'm semi hopeful for 2018 though, it seems to me funding increased significantly after they bought Lotus. If it was me in charge there I'd spend a lot of money on a concurrent program, put some added money into making shorter term improvements but get investing in a longer term, maybe 2 year plan for really significant improvements. HAlf of Honda's problems is chasing the current engine, constantly trying to get what they've got working better and ultimately this new engine of theirs was another rushed engine only really started midway through last season so it's not a surprise it turned out worse. If Renault wanted to avoid that same fate putting smaller resources towards small updates of that engine and a big portion of new resources to a massive update for 2018 would be very sensible.
It would make even more sense as Renault's works car would take a couple of years to really build up the team and get a really good car. I have no idea if they did that, nothing makes me think it, I'm just hopeful that someone over there is playing the long game and next year could see way more competition.