![]() Inevitably, this led to resentment that continues to rumble behind the scenes today.Įven after retuning, the Renault was not the most powerful engine - it lagged by about 5%, or 35bhp, according to Red Bull. Governing body the FIA agreed, and Renault was allowed to modify its engine over the winter of 2008, while Mercedes and Ferrari were not. Red Bull and Renault started lobbying to be allowed to retune the engine, on the basis that the engine freeze was predicated on there being parity between teams, and there wasn't any. ![]() ![]() When Red Bull started their relationship with Renault in 2007, they soon realised that the engine was down on power compared with the rivals from Mercedes and Ferrari - which was a problem, because F1 had started a period of frozen engines, when only changes aimed at reliability would be allowed. The rise of Red Bull-Renault The partnership of Red Bull's Adrian Newey and Renault horsepower appeared invincible between 20 But, as ever in F1, it is not quite as simple as that. On the face of it, it is a catastrophic strategic miscalculation. It is a story of how the most successful team of the past five years have got to a point where, five races before the end of the 2015 season, they have secured a split from their current engine partner without having anything lined up to replace it. How they reached this point is a story of ambition, fuelled by success, turbocharged by frustration, spiced with a dash of arrogance and topped with a sense of entitlement. Nine years on, Red Bull's options have distilled to another deal with Ferrari or quitting F1. That was the end of 2006 after Red Bull became dissatisfied with their previous supplier, Ferrari. ![]()
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