Having my "credibilty" questioned by people who mistake equations for reality over actual experiments is no one worth fretting over . Have a nice day.

What is this?
That was all meZynerji wrote: ↑18 Oct 2020, 17:12Ferrari continuously threatens to leave, while Merc/Renault have been in and out before.
And, can you give a source to the "good riddance" attitude the you claim RBR to have? I have only come across articles that show this to be a great relationship broken up by the Honda corporate board. Not by how the relationship actually feels/functions.
I agree with you. Although I'm not a fan of Red Bull it's pretty clear they get things done, and if they do take over the Honda PU I think they will do a decent job with it. Remember it was only with outside help that Honda actually started to really improve. And by improve I don't mean oh hooray they finished a race, I mean real improvement in all areas.godlameroso wrote: ↑19 Oct 2020, 16:08You haven't refuted anything, did you refute the small dip on the exit of the chicane? No, because it is obviously there. I never claimed that Red Bull can take over Honda's operation tomorrow. I said they are competent enough to run the engines by the time Honda pulls out. Any insult you feel is yours and yours alone. I don't feel offended but as a man I will defend myself, if you don't understand this then you are not much of a man.
Having my "credibilty" questioned by people who mistake equations for reality over actual experiments is no one worth fretting over . Have a nice day.
https://files.catbox.moe/4zd2ud.jpg
What is this?
Outside of Honda the corporation, or outside of Honda F1 program? I believe Honda started drawing engineering help from other departments. As far as outside help, from what I hear the couple personalities that Honda brought in to help with the engine program were let go due to lack of results. This is as far back as the McLaren days. Honda does have to deal with suppliers and a fair bit of them are based in Europe, but a lot were also "home" talents.
Toro Rosso and Honda Jet. Then Red Bull and Max Verstappen. Then Honda Jet again. Led by Yasuaki Asaki who came in from the Automobile division after developing the N-Box.
Yip, me too 100%.Sieper wrote: ↑20 Oct 2020, 11:08I must say that I am personally still in a "mourning" phase. Maybe that is also why the arguments get so heated. Plus I fear there will not be a good solution. I just want to see RBR in the mix, for real. I have no problem with Ferrari turning up again. I want to see real battles. this year has not been a total loss for that, but yes, underwhelming a bit.
Its not just about the money, with the introduction of the new fuel in 2022/23, a new cylinder head must be developed, something redbull cannot manage.
This is something that is more than likely already in development. It was Marko who mentioned a new cylinder head is being developed for biofuel integration.
Something possibly interesting would be a 'backdoor' deal between RBR and Honda, possibly made up a long time ago, where they were always meant to 'take over' Honda's F1 engine, have RBR develop and change the Honda F1 engine, with the help of former Honda employees (get on RBR payroll), work out how to deal with the biofuel, all without being an 'official' honda engine and thus no bad publicity if anything goes bad, and then, at the end, RBR can sell the 'engine formula' back to Honda, and use it to translate into their automotive applications.GhostF1 wrote: ↑21 Oct 2020, 00:29This is something that is more than likely already in development. It was Marko who mentioned a new cylinder head is being developed for biofuel integration.
The fact Red Bull has made noise, and Honda themselves for that matter, that Honda has brought forward their "new engine" that was initially destined for 2022 introduction to 2021, it might be that it will either be already compatible with the new fuel or the new unit will have most of the groundwork done for it and by the end of '21 they'll have a fully developed RA622H ready for deployment for RBR to use in 22 and beyond.
Either way, it's obvious Honda/Merc/Ferrari/Renault will of done PLENTY of research and development into how the new fuel will affect running of these engines by now. This work would of started well before the Honda board in Japan called it quits. So the fact they've been given full funding to continue until the end of 2021 makes me think this could possibly work out well if Red Bull/Mugen/Ilmor/Whoever take over the project.