so here's a thought.
Mercedes showed utter dominance not just the entire year by running @ the front from start to finish, but also from
falling to the back and finishing 2nd (nico) if the car is still intact and the tires will work accordingly. Thus, their power
benefit must be huge.
The following thought is NOT about Mercedes, i'm not pointing fingers towards them, they're still within their engine count.
It is merely a 'thought excersize' about whether there are possibly benefits from accepting grid penalties when using more than 5 engines a season, deliberately.
As you are allowed a engine lineup of 5 fresh engines for an entire season without penalties, when you have used all of them and are in need of a fresh 6th one, you get penalised.
So in general all the teams are intending to have their engines as 'reliable' as possible and using them as tactical as possible so they won't risk penalties later (even though they seem inevitable). In other words; they intend to have their engines last 4 race weekends before switching to the next.
Now here's an idea;
Let's go another route;
As an engineer, you thus create an engine that is aimed more at reliability to cope with this problem, presumably at the cost of power / not being able to getting the most out of the engine.
Now how about we ditch the 'keep it reliable' idea overboard, and just accept that you are going to have to deal with grid penalties for the last 3 to 5 races. perhaps even 6 if you're feeling crazy.
Is it then possible, to make the engine so powerfull, that you get such an advantage in power that you can overtake the rest of the field without the problem of grid penalties later in the year?
In other words; compared to the way you'd 'handle' your engines 'normally', you seek benefit for like 15 races from huge power supply, having vast qualy power and race power, and are left 'just' with the 'handicap' of having to take penalties for the final 5 races since you've used all possible resources of those allowed 5 fresh engines during the course of 15 races?
In essence, you are going to run the same-spec powerfull engines for the final 5 races, but are going to have to deal with grid penalties because you use a 6th one, perhaps even 7th.
So You've had 15 races of immense power to benefit from with the goal of gaining as many championship points as possible, and are going to deal with 5 final races where you the drivers are having be more active with overtaking......but, since you still have the power benefit, it'll essentially make it easier to overtake other cars compared to running a weaker engine but with the idea you can run them 20 races without penalty.
so can you bring enough power/potential into the engine to benefit from this, or is that not possible?
in other words; is it worth taking the penalties for the benefit of power, or is it not humanely possible to gain enough power benefit compared to reliability?
If i'd put this in figures:
Engine 1: Built to last 4 races
Engine 2: Built to last 3 races
Engine 1 needs to run more mileage compared to engine 2, thus engine wear needs to be minimized to achieve this.
Engine 2 needs to run less mileage compared to engine 1, thus engine wear is a lesser concern - in other words, you can 'crank up' the engine for the same race weekend, at the cost of mileage, but with the benefit of using the most out of the engine.
is it possible to benefit to have a 'engine 2' at the cost of grid penalties?