Current Red Bull Racing

Red Bull Racing

FIA Entry: Red Bull Racing Renault
Car 1: Sebastien Vettel
Car 2: Mark Webber
Engine: Renault V8
Team Owner: Dietrich Mateschitz
Team Principal: Christian Horner
Chief Technical: Office Adrian Newey
Chief Designer: Rob Marshall
Race Engineer Car 1: Guillaume “Rocky” Rocquelin
Race Engineer Car 2: Ciaron Pilbeam

Stats as of end 2010

First Entered 2005
Races Entered 107
Race Wins 15
Pole Positions 20
Fastest Laps 12
Driver World Championships 1
Constructor World Championships 1

Team History

Before Red Bull

In 1997 Paul Stewart, aided by his father Jackie and the Ford Motor Company, made the leap from F3000 to F1 as an entrant. Jonny Herbert won 1 race for the Stewart team before it was sold off to Ford who re-branded the cars as Jaguar.

Ford stuck with it through thick and thin (mainly thin) through to the end of 2004 before selling the team to Dietrich Mateschitz, who owns the Red Bull drinks brand, for $1 on the understanding he invested $400 million over 3 years

Red Bull Racing

With Christian Horner installed as team principal, McLaren refugee David Coulthard and Christian Klien as the drivers Red Bull went racing. Their first season was certainly more successful than Jaguar had managed, even with the same Cosworth power plant, with Coulthard managing a 4th place at the European Grand Prix and the team finishing 7th in the Constructors Championship.

Adrian Newey joined from McLaren as chief designer for 2006 and Red Bull swapped to Ferrari engines. Coulthard managed a podium at his "home" race in Monaco prompting Christian Horner to jump naked, other than wearing a red cape, into a swimming pool.

Christian Klien, who shared the car with Vitantonio Liuzzi in 2005 and Robert Doornbos in 2006, departed the team for 2007 and was replaced by Mark Webber. The RB3 was the first full "Newey" car and was coupled with a Renault motor. The car was very unreliable, suffering from a variety of different problems but Webber managed a podium at the European Grand Prix and the team finished 5th in the WCC.

Retaining the same engine and drivers for 2008 Red Bull slipped back to 7th in the WCC and again only managed a single podium, for Coulthard in Canada, but the reliability issues which plagued the car the previous season were mainly resolved.

2009 was Red Bull's break through year. With Coulthard having retired Webber was joined by Red Bull junior driver Sebastien Vettel. The new rules allowed Newey to design a car which challenged for both the Drivers and Constructors Championship. Webber won 2 races, Vettel 4 and the team climbed to 2nd in WCC taking 3 pole positions en-route.

In 2010 Red Bull justified Mateschitz's investment winning the Constructors title and Vettel the Drivers Championship. They won 9 races through the season, 5 for Vettel and 4 for Webber and took 10 poles. Webber led the title race for much of the season but it was the 23 year old Vettel who stole the title in the last race of the season and became the youngest Champion as a result.

2011 sees the team retain the same driver line up as 2010 and continue with Renault engine power in the new RB7 car.
 
TheJudge13 essentially ripped that story from a several-month old German article by AMuS, which from what I gather is kind of par for the course with them.

Will be interesting to see how this one unfolds though, can't say I expected it.
 
I suspect that, if McLaren underperforms again next year, after RD vetoed the Bulls getting Honda power, they will be in very deep trouble with the Japanese firm. And, if RD were to blame said underperformance on the Honda PU as he has been doing all of this season, he may find himself in the same position that RB is in today.
 
im getting really confused now as the sky sports f1 blog has said at 10.30am

Illien has also denied that he and Red Bull will run their own development programme on Renault's engine in 2016 - save for the ERS, which the former world champions have two years' worth of expertise developing anyway. Rather, they could run the same engine but without Renault branding. Illien is reportedly interested, however, in developing the new low-cost engine that the FIA wants to introduce in 2017 - and which Red Bull support - after Ferrari vetoed plans for a €12m price cap on manufacturer hybrids
 
A nice hidden by Ferrari to say that we can give you parts but .... we also want to sign your drivers in the future

its not the drivers Ferrari will be after but also the engineers as well
 
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seems like the magic red bull roundabout has us back to Ferrari engine. because if ive read below correctly he going to give red bull a spec behinds engine but may be able to take it & do what they were saying at renault, develop it themselves

Ferrari offers Red Bull new engine idea

I think this is Ferrari trying to solve the third-party engine idea in a way which ensures they don't fall behind the third party engine. They are essentially offering to design a third-party engine for Red Bull, and to sweeten it they are saying they will allow Red Bull to provide engineering input to this engine. Of course any good ideas would probably also go into the works engine, and bad ideas would not, so the works engine will always be ahead.
 
Its a good way for Ferrari to stay in touch with Mercedes in lending technical support and now they are thinking outside the box unlike Honda with the opportunity of working with Red Bull
 
As I expected Renault would be supply Red Bull and give them less sponsorship in return so that is one way to snap Red Bull's hand. When it said it was given a lot of money to Renault to come up with a decent engine I think should have been pointed out that Renault's own subsidiary companies have been covering the costs

:oops::clip:

Who said that Renault still actually had a legal contract with Red Bull:cheers:
 
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Round and round and round it goes where will it stop nobody knows.

Merry+Go+Round.jpg
 
Any read Mark Webber's autobiography ? Apparently he's about to become WEC and in his small autobiography he mentioned about Red Bull not managing the inter team battle well between him and Vettel.

Having just read Kevin Pietersen's autobiography I just wonder if his is worth a read
 
If its anything like his interviews it'll be one long whinge about how unlucky he was and how dangerous everyone else was. Not sure its for me.

By the way is it an Autobiography that he has written himself or a Biography that has been written by a ghost writer?
 
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