IceG wrote:The Red Bull/Toro Roso situation is intruiging.
By swapping Toro Rosso from Ferrari to Renault engines, it means that the two teams succeed or fail together. Perhaps had Toro Rosso stayed with Ferrari they could have been in the embarassing position of being capable of outperforming the senior team. It would also have meant that the advertising publicity purpose of running the teams would not have taken such a hit. And Red Bull might have had a heads up as to what they needed to achieve performance-wise vis-a-vis the Ferrari engine. All in the past now of course.
As an aside, do we really want a championship where 1/3rd of the cars are effectively handicapped and running in another series? To have one team screw up the installation and have to respond is one thing; to have four teams hampered by a bad engine is quite another because it destroys the spectacle and excitement. Given which teams are affected, there is the concern that an engine debacle could see them all leave the sport for one reason or another - then where are we?
Well, part of the reason for Toro Rosso switching to Renault was to tie the performance of the junior team more closely to that of the parent, not to mention making it cheaper to run the junior team too (because Toro Rosso now uses the same energy recovery systems and transmission of the parent team, rather than bespoke units, that cuts costs for Red Bull Technology and frees up resources that can be used elsewhere).
As for the next question, I guess that there is a bit of a split between two different groups on the Renault situation. On the one hand, we have the group that is concerned about the impact on the Renault engined teams and the overall competitiveness of the sport if, as pointed out earlier, a third of the grid are effectively out of the competition. It's especially worrying for the survival of Caterham and Lotus - Red Bull and Toro Rosso at least have the money to comfortably weather the performance hit, but if Fernandes is disheartened by the performance of the team in 2014 and Lotus tumble down the field, it may well prove to be the final tipping point for those two teams.
On the other hand, there are also those who say, to a certain extent, that Renault's problems are of their own making - they were the fiercest advocate for the current engine format yet, according to Symonds, they have steadily cut back on resources and personnel for their F1 division for several years now, whilst Horner is claiming that the issues with the energy recovery systems is because there hasn't been systematic integration of the energy recovery systems (which he claims were largely left to the teams to develop) and the remainder of the powertrain, which was developed in house by Renault Sport.
Of course, if there is one failing that Red Bull have had recently, it has been in the field of energy recovery systems - Newey has always been rather keen to avoid KERS (not fitting it at all in the past, and then reportedly running a cut down KERS unit to minimise the packaging constrains as much as possible), and it is therefore one area which has been neglected in favour of their aerodynamics division.
Therefore, there are many who think that it is unfair to level the field again given that Mercedes and Ferrari are ahead because they invested in their programs whilst Renault didn't, and that both Renault and Red Bull (for their work on the energy recovery systems) deserve to pay the price for not putting in the effort that their rivals have.