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Williams refutes claims of Mercedes engine parity gripe

Claire Williams has denied suggestions that her team played a role in persuading the FIA to clamp down on F1 customer engine parity this season.

Robert Kubica, Williams FW41

Photo by: Sutton Images

Claire Williams
Lance Stroll, Williams FW41
Lance Stroll, Williams FW41
Sergey Sirotkin, Williams FW41
Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes AMG F1 W09

In the wake of the technical directive on the matter issued by Charlie Whiting in January, Red Bull Racing team principal Christian Horner suggested that the media “should ask Claire Williams” where the impetus for the FIA’s new focus on parity came from.

Mercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff has since denied that the FIA has targeted Mercedes or that either Williams or Force India had lobbied the FIA, and the Grove outfit’s deputy team principal has now backed up the Austrian’s view.

“Contrary to comments made recently in the press, we refute any suggestion that we have questioned the parity of the power units provided by Mercedes-AMG HPP,” Williams said in a statement.

“We are absolutely confident that the power units used by Mercedes, Force India and ourselves are identical in terms of both hardware and software.

“We have an excellent professional and personal relationship with Mercedes, and our focus is firmly on continuing the good work that we have started, as we prepare for the final test in Barcelona this week ahead of the new season.”

Williams technical chief Paddy Lowe has suggested that there is no reason for the team to push for parity – because in theory it could help its immediate rivals to find more performance from their power units.

“If you analyse it, it’s probably bad for us, because I’m not aware of any difference that memo will make to Mercedes,” he told Motorsport.com.

“It might affect other engine manufacturers, in which case it will bump up some of our potential rivals, like McLaren or Red Bull, for the sake of argument.

"On that basis it certainly would not be in our interest to have promoted it.”

Lowe says that Mercedes prefers customers to have the same specs and operating conditions, because it can learn more from six cars than two.

“Mercedes values the contribution of their customer teams in the generation of engine performance and reliability data. So they want us to run at the same levels.”

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