Pat Symmonds told the press. From a financial point of view this is a convincing point but engineering wise one can only shake the head in surprise.We came to the conclusion that the construction of a transitional car is simply not worth it.
There are many things you can prepare by simulation but nothing substitutes for a proper prototype and field test. It is tried and true engineering systematic to use all stages available to development in order to firm up the validity of technical choices you have to make. The more steps you do with proper evaluation and complete gate process the fewer risks you encounter when you have to make the jump and commit your resources to a final concept of design, manufacture and supply chain.
I can anticipate the headlines when Renault are going to find the bugs in their 2009 car in February and suffer the consequences for early reliability and performance. They will have all kinds of wierd reasons for the problem from suppliers letting them down to manufacturing difficulties and safety issues. such issues have to be expected and prototype and field testing is the classical way to eliminate issues before you get hurt in the race when it counts.
Toyota is taking a similar route but they are vastly experienced in using hybrid technology in racing. they can potentially afford some short cuts but its lethal for the guys that want to retain Alonso. Have they already given up on convincing Alonso to stay? What are they going to do with a 30-40% budget increase if they are not spending it on KERS?