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Red Bull engine rule change bid derailed

ByAutoSport

Published 18/11/2017 at 09:33 GMT

Ferrari has derailed Red Bull's latest attempt to abandon Formula 1's switch to three engines per year in 2018, despite growing unease about the implications of the rule change.

Eurosport

Image credit: Eurosport

With F1 already under fire for the wave of grid penalties that have marred the end of the campaign - which Ross Brawn recently said were making a "farce" of F1 - there are concerns that the situation could get even worse next season with teams having to get through the campaign with one fewer power unit.
Sources have revealed that Red Bull team principal Christian Horner brought up the matter at the Strategy Group meeting before the Brazilian Grand Prix in the hope of garnering unanimous support to keep F1 at the current four engine per season limit.
But it is understood that Ferrari made clear it would not back such a move on the grounds that it had already devoted time and resources to ensuring its engines were reliable enough to last the extra mileage.
With Ferrari's stance clear, the discussion about the rule change ended swiftly - as it would need every team to back the change for it to move forward.
It is not the first time that Red Bull has tried to steer F1 away from cutting back to three engines, with Horner having raised the matter already earlier this year.
Speaking at the Italian GP in September, Horner said he had hoped other teams would see sense.
"I tried to get it changed at an earlier meeting in the year, but there was no support for it," he said. "I would hope that there would now be a different outcome, with teams staring down the barrel of further penalties between now and the end of the year."
World champion Lewis Hamilton added to the criticisms of the three engine rule in Brazil last weekend because of fears that drivers would be constantly having to manage mileage in 2018.
"I don't like the idea of going to three engines, I think that sucks," he said. "We should be able to push more. Sprinting is what we're missing in F1."
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