Benetton wrote:However, weren't they pretty decent in the 1997 Jordan?
dinizintheoven wrote:I've got one: "Reject Moments That Actually Never Happened, As Opposed To Those That Did And Which End With 'Oh, Wait!'" by the users of the F1 Rejects forum.
tzerof1 wrote:The answer is simple: Peugeot only became an F1 engine supplier in 1994 because they decided to halt their Group C sportscar program. The engine that McLaren used in 1994 was just a modified version of the engine used int the Peugeot 905 as a matter of fact. They were never able to really develop a working relationship with a team in the way that Renault had with Williams or Mercedes have with McLaren. And when Prost tried to do that in 1998-2000, that came at a time when the resources of Peugeot Sport were more focused on their WRC program, thus the engines ended up being what they were.
Sniff Petrol wrote:Giedo van der Garde was hoping to copy Jos ‘The Boss’ Verstappen by using a nickname that rhymed with his first name but has run through the options and thought better of it.

Wizzie wrote:He's from a family of used cars salesmen... which might as well be the mafia EurobrunMe wrote:I have no idea why I always think Tony D'Alberto is a mafia member![]()
eurobrun wrote:Weren't the Asiatech engined modified Peugoets?
East Londoner wrote:eurobrun wrote:Weren't the Asiatech engines modified Peugoets?
Modified? They were exactly the same at the last race of 2001 as they had been at the last race of 2000!![]()
I think it was the only engine used in 2001 that didn't change at all that season. Even the bloody 1998 Ford engine used by Minardi had some development.
Wizzie wrote:He's from a family of used cars salesmen... which might as well be the mafia EurobrunMe wrote:I have no idea why I always think Tony D'Alberto is a mafia member![]()
JeremyMcClean wrote:Benetton wrote:However, weren't they pretty decent in the 1997 Jordan?
Maybe, but they must have been crap enouh for Jordan to get Hondas to replace them...not every day you hear that
tzerof1 wrote:The answer is simple: Peugeot only became an F1 engine supplier in 1994 because they decided to halt their Group C sportscar program. The engine that McLaren used in 1994 was just a modified version of the engine used int the Peugeot 905 as a matter of fact. They were never able to really develop a working relationship with a team in the way that Renault had with Williams or Mercedes have with McLaren. And when Prost tried to do that in 1998-2000, that came at a time when the resources of Peugeot Sport were more focused on their WRC program, thus the engines ended up being what they were.
ibsey wrote:JeremyMcClean wrote:Benetton wrote:However, weren't they pretty decent in the 1997 Jordan?
Maybe, but they must have been crap enouh for Jordan to get Hondas to replace them...not every day you hear that
IIRC Jordan didn't willingly give up the 1997 Peugeot engines.
eurobrun wrote:East Londoner wrote:eurobrun wrote:Weren't the Asiatech engines modified Peugoets?
Modified? They were exactly the same at the last race of 2001 as they had been at the last race of 2000!![]()
I think it was the only engine used in 2001 that didn't change at all that season. Even the bloody 1998 Ford engine used by Minardi had some development.
That's strange, I don't ever seem to recall Arrows being that unreliable in 2001.
Faustus wrote:15 retirements out of 34 starts. Not as bad as some, but not brilliant in any way.
The Asiatech engines were essentially unchanged from early 2000, so they were desesperately down on power and torque. The half-decent results that the Arrows A22 achieved had very little to do with the engines. The car had a very small fuel tank and Arrows took a few gambles with pitstop strategy and some of them could have paid off nicely, but ultimately there was only 1 point.
redbulljack14 wrote:Faustus wrote:15 retirements out of 34 starts. Not as bad as some, but not brilliant in any way.
The Asiatech engines were essentially unchanged from early 2000, so they were desesperately down on power and torque. The half-decent results that the Arrows A22 achieved had very little to do with the engines. The car had a very small fuel tank and Arrows took a few gambles with pitstop strategy and some of them could have paid off nicely, but ultimately there was only 1 point.
Verstappen running 2nd at Sepang undoubtedly the highlight, it was good seeing him that high up the grid.
David AGS wrote:I just read the top 50 McLaren drivers on their website (mclaren.com), and got to... Philippe Alliott.
What I read is that Brundle and Alliott did like a shootout. Jean Pierre Jabouille (Pug boss) who was Alliott's mate decided to put a bale of hay on the Magny Cours track where the shootout took place on Brundle's lap, forcing the Brit to back off and therefore recording a slower lap, as seen on the telemetr
The bale was moved for Alliott, and Jabouille tried to prove a point to Ron Dennis (I presume) that his compatriot was faster, and he should get the drive.
This is high up of the Rejectfullness list I presume!
Enforcer wrote:David AGS wrote:I just read the top 50 McLaren drivers on their website (mclaren.com), and got to... Philippe Alliott.
What I read is that Brundle and Alliott did like a shootout. Jean Pierre Jabouille (Pug boss) who was Alliott's mate decided to put a bale of hay on the Magny Cours track where the shootout took place on Brundle's lap, forcing the Brit to back off and therefore recording a slower lap, as seen on the telemetr
The bale was moved for Alliott, and Jabouille tried to prove a point to Ron Dennis (I presume) that his compatriot was faster, and he should get the drive.
This is high up of the Rejectfullness list I presume!
Lol. The way you described that wasn't so much rejectful as it was improbably comedic. I had this image of Jaboullie trying to sneak a hay-bale on to the track whilst they were readying Brundle's car, and then try to get rid of it again after his run so people wouldn't believe him when he said it was there. :lol:
It was at Paul Ricard and the hay-bale chicane was supposed to be there as part of the test. And initially Alliot was slower than Brundle, cos Brundle was a bit better at being an F1 driver. Then he was mysteriously faster and they caught him on the telemetry because he hadn't backed off. So did he just go around it or was it removed?
Incidentally, Alliot's the only one behind Michael Andretti on that list. Ouch. :lol:
EDIT: Actually, I just noticed Mansell's immediately ahead of Andretti. Now that's a bit unfair, Andretti actually scored points for McLaren.
Wizzie wrote:He's from a family of used cars salesmen... which might as well be the mafia EurobrunMe wrote:I have no idea why I always think Tony D'Alberto is a mafia member![]()
Enforcer wrote:David AGS wrote:I just read the top 50 McLaren drivers on their website (mclaren.com), and got to... Philippe Alliott.
What I read is that Brundle and Alliott did like a shootout. Jean Pierre Jabouille (Pug boss) who was Alliott's mate decided to put a bale of hay on the Magny Cours track where the shootout took place on Brundle's lap, forcing the Brit to back off and therefore recording a slower lap, as seen on the telemetr
The bale was moved for Alliott, and Jabouille tried to prove a point to Ron Dennis (I presume) that his compatriot was faster, and he should get the drive.
This is high up of the Rejectfullness list I presume!
Lol. The way you described that wasn't so much rejectful as it was improbably comedic. I had this image of Jaboullie trying to sneak a hay-bale on to the track whilst they were readying Brundle's car, and then try to get rid of it again after his run so people wouldn't believe him when he said it was there.![]()
It was at Paul Ricard and the hay-bale chicane was supposed to be there as part of the test. And initially Alliot was slower than Brundle, cos Brundle was a bit better at being an F1 driver. Then he was mysteriously faster and they caught him on the telemetry because he hadn't backed off. So did he just go around it or was it removed?
Incidentally, Alliot's the only one behind Michael Andretti on that list. Ouch.
EDIT: Actually, I just noticed Mansell's immediately ahead of Andretti. Now that's a bit unfair, Andretti actually scored points for McLaren.
Jocke1 wrote:I'm Brian and so is my wife.
takagi_for_the_win wrote:darkapprentice77 wrote:What would happen if you put a hard tyre the front-left wheel, a soft tyre on the front-right, an intermediate on the rear-left and a wet tyre on the rear-right?
You'd still have better race pace than the Mercedes'.
James1978 wrote:Why does the list only start at #6?
The 5 missing are probably Senna, Prost, Hakkinen, Hunt and McLaren himself!!!
And also they list Kimi Raikkonen at #15 but said they're excluding current drivers, which includes Alonso and Kovalainen (surely Heikki's good enough to be top 50 when Michael Andretti's in!!!) so it doesn't just mean Hamilton and Button who currently drive for them.......oops.
David AGS wrote:What I read is that Brundle and Alliott did like a shootout. Jean Pierre Jabouille (Pug boss) who was Alliott's mate decided to put a bale of hay on the Magny Cours track where the shootout took place on Brundle's lap, forcing the Brit to back off and therefore recording a slower lap, as seen on the telemetr
The bale was moved for Alliott, and Jabouille tried to prove a point to Ron Dennis (I presume) that his compatriot was faster, and he should get the drive.
ibsey wrote:It is easy to forget that a top team like Mclaren had to hire drivers like Jan Magnussen, Stephen South, Mark Blundell & of course Philippe Alliott.David AGS wrote:What I read is that Brundle and Alliott did like a shootout. Jean Pierre Jabouille (Pug boss) who was Alliott's mate decided to put a bale of hay on the Magny Cours track where the shootout took place on Brundle's lap, forcing the Brit to back off and therefore recording a slower lap, as seen on the telemetr
The bale was moved for Alliott, and Jabouille tried to prove a point to Ron Dennis (I presume) that his compatriot was faster, and he should get the drive.
Great story David AGS. I wonder if the fact that Brundle got the drive over (Pug boss's mate) Alliott, caused the supposed animosity that Brundle later felt Peugeot had towards him. As I stated earlier IIRC in Martin Brundle's book, 'Working the Wheel' he explained how whenever his Peugeot engine used to blow up in his 1994 Mclaren. It was usually the same fault, something about a flywheel. Anyway IIRC he felt the Peugeot engineers didn't always listen to him & even blamed him from the failures. Interesting thought.
ibsey wrote:Great story David AGS. I wonder if the fact that Brundle got the drive over (Pug boss's mate) Alliott, caused the supposed animosity that Brundle later felt Peugeot had towards him. As I stated earlier IIRC in Martin Brundle's book, 'Working the Wheel' he explained how whenever his Peugeot engine used to blow up in his 1994 Mclaren. It was usually the same fault, something about a flywheel. Anyway IIRC he felt the Peugeot engineers didn't always listen to him & even blamed him from the failures. Interesting thought.
pasta_maldonado wrote:Maybe they made the engine blow up on purpose to limit Brundle's progress?
tzerof1 wrote:So, based on that testimony, could it be possible that Martin Brundle's engine exploding at the start of the Silverstone 1994 wasn't as much of a random occurrence as one might be led to believe? Think about it. British car, British driver, and it's the home race for both. And you're pissed that the British man is driving the car instead of your Frenchman because the smart engineers saw he gained that unfair advantage you may or may not have given him at that test at Paul Ricard. So why not do a bit of dodgy mechanic work, and get some measure of vengeance against both?
Or, as suggested by pasta_maldonado, have a season long campaign against him.
Though according to formula1.com's archive, Brundle had only 3 engine related retirements, to Hakkinen's four that season. And both cars retired at the French GP from engine failures. So who knows?
ibsey wrote:On a slightly simliar note, there is a great story I recently read in Autosport about the Brabham team, purposely trying to blow up their BMW engines when testing them in mid 1982. Simply because they wanted to show BMW, the engines were too unrealiable. So Brabham could get out of having to run them for race weekends.
Unfortantely for Brabham, despite their best efforts, IIRC they couldn't blow up enough BMW engines to justify to the German manufacture not to run them for the latter part of 1982.
Now that is what I call a reject worthy story.
tzerof1 wrote:Though according to formula1.com's archive, Brundle had only three engine related retirements, to Hakkinen's four that season. And both cars retired at the French GP from engine failures. So who knows?
tzerof1 wrote:That's quite interesting, I never knew about his flywheel having come off in Brazil, hence why it was listed as "collision" and also his Pacific retirement was listed as "spun off", so I'd venture to guess that's partly why I missed three of his engine failures. But seriously, thanks for taking the time to dig out Brundle's book and share that. That's some really interesting stuff he said. And you'd think Peugeot would want to do something about it's flywheel problem, it's not like it's Brundle's suggesting they design an entirely new engine or something.
AndreaModa wrote:But Brundle then drove the Jordan-Peugeot in '96, so had the ill-feeling subsided by that point?
I find it hard to believe that McLaren, who it seems according to Brundle (from the extracts ibsey has posted) were aware of the disparity between himself and Hakkinen, would simply stand back and allow that sort of situation to develop, especially considering the mid-1990s was arguably the worst spell for McLaren results-wise in F1 since the late 70s, and remains so to this day. I would have thought they'd be pushing for both drivers to achieve as much as possible, and not just blow sunshine up Hakkinen's arse.
Then again, we are talking about Ron Dennis, and he does do some strange things!
mario wrote:It is worth noting that Jabouille was sacked in 1995 as the senior management at Peugeot held him responsible for the failings of their engine program. If there was animosity between Peugeot and Brundle, Alliot's retirement from racing and Jabouille's departure from Peugeot would have removed a major source of animosity between the two sides.
ibsey wrote:Also remember that Prost & Renualt had a massive falling out after 1983, after Prost apparently got a little 'too friendly' with one of the wives of the management at Renualt. Yet they still got back together 10 years later. Time heals all wounds, as I believe the saying goes.
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:ibsey wrote:Also remember that Prost & Renualt had a massive falling out after 1983, after Prost apparently got a little 'too friendly' with one of the wives of the management at Renualt. Yet they still got back together 10 years later. Time heals all wounds, as I believe the saying goes.
Really? I though Prost was just pissed off at Renault resting on their laurels, easing off development, and thus costing him the title to Piquet.
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