The story appears on

Page A15

May 30, 2018

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Sports » Motor Racing

Canada could be key for Red Bull’s engine decision

THE Canadian Grand Prix could determine whether Red Bull decides to stick with Renault, which powered it to all its Formula One championships, or switch to Honda engines next season.

Team boss Christian Horner said after Sunday’s Monaco Grand Prix, won by his Australian driver Daniel Ricciardo, that a decision would have to be made by “end of June, beginning of July.”

“We’re waiting with great interest to see the relative performance of engines in Montreal in two weeks’ time.”

Canada, on June 10, is the seventh round of the 21-race season and both manufacturers are planning to bring major upgrades to the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve.

Red Bull, whose Renault engines are branded Tag Heuer, has won twice this season but has had a rocky relationship with the French company since the start of the V6 turbo hybrid era in 2014.

Honda is working with Red Bull-owned Toro Rosso and has improved the performance of its engine notably since the termination of a three-year partnership with McLaren.

While Ricciardo is third overall in the championship, he has suffered reliability problems — as well as a costly crash with teammate Max Verstappen — and is 38 points off Mercedes’ leader Lewis Hamilton.

The Australian is out of contract at the end of the season and is also waiting to see what engine Red Bull goes for.

“First thing is get the engine sorted and then very much follow on from there with driver,” said Horner.

“I think we’ve had a great chassis from the first race, to be honest,” he added. “Our problem has always been on Saturdays... if we can improve our Saturdays, then our races will be competitive.

“If we could just get a little bit more at the end of Q3 (the final phase of qualifying) on peak power, there’s no reason why we shouldn’t be able to give Ferrari and Mercedes regularly a hard time.”

Ricciardo started on pole position in Monaco on Sunday, the team’s first in two years, and won despite having a power unit problem from lap 28.

Verstappen set the fastest race lap, the fourth time in six grands prix that Red Bull has done that.

“The FIA understands the situation we’re in and there’s no hard and fast deadline,” said Horner of the engine decision.

Renault has previously said it would need to know by May-end because of the long lead times involved in manufacturing.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend