• @mjhagen
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    151 year ago

    Motorsport.com revealed over the Hungarian Grand Prix weekend that the idea of introducing a mechanism to equalise power units among the manufacturers has been tabled by the FIA for discussion at this week’s meeting of the F1 Commission. It is understood that the move has been prompted by concerns that the Renault engine, which is used by Alpine, has fallen behind rivals and could be as much as 30hp down on the best.

    While not confirming any figures, Alpine team principal Otmar Szafnauer has admitted that the French manufacturer is adrift of the opposition – which is hampering its competitive fortunes.

    “All the teams do the same analysis and the FIA does its analysis,” he said when asked about how his engine stacked up against the opposition. “We are significantly down.”

    Although teams do not normally like handing performance gains to rivals, the situation surrounding equalisation during a power unit freeze is a different matter.

    With Renault unable to make any improvements to its power units because the current engines are homologated, the situation is slightly unfair to anyone who finds themselves behind.

    That is why Red Bull boss Horner thinks that, if the FIA can show that there is disparity between the engines, then it is only right that moves are made to put everyone on a level playing field.

    Asked by Motorsport.com what he thought about the engine equalisation situation, Horner said: “It is about seeing what are the deficits. The FIA have all of the data and they should present exactly what the differences are.

    “I think that would be fascinating for everybody to see, and I think that if there is a deficit under homologation, then it’s something that we should be sensible about - otherwise, you’re locked in for two years. I wouldn’t be averse to a sensible discussion.”

    Horner has in the past made calls for equalisation in the early turbo hybrid years when faced with a Renault engine that was behind the benchmark power units of Mercedes and Ferrari.

    Szafnauer has welcomed Horner’s stance, especially because the engines were frozen from 2022 to 2025 as a means of helping Red Bull continue to use Honda engines in the wake of the Japanese manufacturer’s withdrawal from F1.

    “I am glad Christian said that because, if you look back, the reason the engines were frozen was because Honda was pulling out at that time and Red Bull didn’t have an engine department to continue developing,” he explained.

    “The reason we all agreed was for the benefit of Red Bull, so it is nice that Christian recognises that.

    “And, at the time of the arrangement, there was also an agreement among the engine manufacturers that if anybody fell out by 1% then there would be good faith discussions to bring that parity back.”

    While F1’s power units have been frozen since the start of 2022, Szafnauer believes that the competitive picture has shifted since then as rivals have gained from making reliability upgrades.

    “Everybody is allowed to fix their reliability issues and, hidden in reliability issues, can sometimes be power upgrades,” he said. “It depends on what reliability issue you are fixing.

    “I remember in 2007 when we froze the V8s, I was the one who received every request from other teams for Honda. They came to me first, and all the requests back then were for cost-saving and reliability.

    “I’d pass them on to the correct engineers. But there is a lot of stuff that can be disguised as reliability and then you increase the power.”

  • @[email protected]
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    131 year ago

    I’m so confused, I always assume Horner is double speaking and shit talking but I can’t quite figure out the angle here. Is it: “Go ahead and equalise the engines and fight amongst yourselves we have aero advantage anyway”?

    • @PhotographerM
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      121 year ago

      Engine equalisation would cut development costs massively, figuratively speaking in any technology 95% of the performance is achieved with 50% of the budget, so the big spends are always on the tiny things that keep you ahead of the competition, if everyone is equalised then there is no reason to waste money on developments that get the extra 2 or 3 HP from the system.

      • @SatouKazuma
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        31 year ago

        Pareto efficiency for the win?

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        This sounds so sensible that I am still shocked that Christian “It wasn’t me” Horner has said it 😃.

        • Archive
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          21 year ago

          I think Horner is for it because he knows it will harm the competitors more than Red Bull.

    • bazpoint
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      91 year ago

      The other angle I haven’t seen suggested here is that this is a forward-looking insurance play from Horner. At the moment RBPT are winning off the back of development work done by Honda in previous years. Nonetheless, they are new to the engine game and there is likely some substantial concern that when the next engine regs come they will be left floundering.

      By backing the equalisation they give themselves precedent to demand the same again a few years down the line if RB engines fall behind the pack. They are likely very confident in the rest of their current package, to the point that they can risk making the current situation more competitive in order to guard against future disaster.

      I don’t especially like Horner, but I think it’s hard to argue that he’s anything but an excellent team principle, possibly the best on the grid. If he’s doing this there is zero chance it’s for altruistic reasons - there is a play for RB here somewhere, it’s just a case of figuring out what it is.

    • klz
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      71 year ago

      I can see a few reasons why I think red bull won’t be against this.

      1. They believe they have the best drive on the grid. Put everyone in identical cars and Max still probably wins everything
      2. They believe their aero package is better than anyone else
      3. They were helped by a similar thing a few years ago when Honda was dropping engine manufacturing. Paying back the karma
      4. Helps keep costs down. Making an engine be as good as everyone else is significantly easier than making an engine better than everyone else. There becomes a point when it is exponentially harder to increase performance
    • @acosmichippo
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      41 year ago

      because they don’t really want to make engines and don’t want a repeat of 2014 with the next engine regulation change.

      • @danielfgom
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        21 year ago

        If I’m not mistaken Red Bull will be making their own engines from either 2024 or 2026? I’m sure I read they they are building that facility now.

        Maybe he’s concerned that their first engine will be down on power compared to the rest, in which case equalising would benefit him.

        • @acosmichippo
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          31 year ago

          yeah they are because they have to. I’m sure they would prefer not to.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      equalise the engines and fight amongst yourselves we have aero advantage anyway

      this is what it sounds like, Red Bull has Adrian Newey so might as well neutralize the engine advantage that Ferrari or Merc could possibly have

  • t0m5k1
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    61 year ago

    Can someone post the article content plz?

  • Archive
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    61 year ago

    Of course Horner would back this lmao

  • @luffyuk
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    31 year ago

    I reckon there should be a rule where every team gets an Adrian Newey.