jono794 wrote:mds wrote:Between Max claiming they are short 70-80HP on Mercedes and Ferrari on one hand, and Gasly saying how much time they lose on the straights on the other hand, I'm not exactly feeling confident for RBR for next year.
I think it's worse than that. After the manufacturers backflipped it now looks like the MGU-H could be retained for 2021, which means little to no chance of new manufacturers joining. At the time Red Bull signed with Honda, it looked likely there would be a least one or two new manufacturers joining in 2021, and Red Bull would have an escape hatch if Honda continued to show they can't build a competitive PU. Now that escape hatch is possibly gone and to stay in F1 Red Bull will have to stay with Honda for the duration. That has the potential to kill the team.
We'll see, I guess. On 2021, I don't really know how much the teams have to say in it, but looking at it objectively, there are:
- 3 Mercedes-powered teams who are probably happy with the PU and not really want to have a shakeup in engine performance
- 3 Ferrari-powered teams, same reasoning
Then you have Renault who probably think they'll get there and don't want to risk another shakeup and getting it wrong again?
Basically it's probably only RBR/STR who at this point want a complete redesign of the PU regulations. But even if the Renault-powered teams want that as well, it's still a 4 to 6 minority wanting to change the engine regs.