I assumed it was a secret source from the Ferrari lounge because I tried google no joy
Merc DEMAND new engine?
https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=google&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&client=safari#hl=en&q=mercedes+demanded+new+f1+engineMerc threatened to leave?
https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=google&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&client=safari#hl=en&q=mercedes+threatened+to+leave+f1Nothing about the hybrid here just about bribery of Ferrari
According to a report in the Daily Telegraph, Mercedes is extremely unhappy with terms being offered by Bernie Ecclestone and could leave F1 – or possibly take Bernie to court.
The root of the argument is the belief that Bernie is offering big incentives to the three top teams – Ferrari, Red Bull and McLaren to stay in the sport, and these incentives are being denied to others.
Haug 2014 engine demand?
https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=google&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&client=safari#hl=en&q=haug+mercedes+f1+2014+demandNada, zilch, zero, nothing, bs, hot air, blatant lies, pathetic butthurtery
edit; I found those links while travelling in pouring rain and whilst operating a PDK gearbox (auto mode useless in rain) at the same time as using my iphone
now I can add some more
Renault - one of F1's two other car manufacturers - threatened to quit if the sport did not adopt the new engines, because the old V8s were no longer relevant to road-car development.
Now Mercedes has revealed it would also probably have stopped if F1 had not decided to commit to the efficiency formula in 2009, around the time BMW and Toyota left the sport.
"I think so, yeah," Weber told BBC Sport. "Because we had the discussion."
"We had at different times the challenge to discuss F1 with the [Daimler] supervisory board," he added.
"We had hard discussions. And it was always - and even more so when it came to the later years - harder to explain why we were using naturally aspirated engines.
So Renault threatened to quit, BMW and Toyota quit and Merc AMG found it hard going to justify staying to the Daimler board - no threats to quit anywhere
Every team was involved with the changes from 2009
Talks are ongoing between the teams and the FIA about what kind of engines the sport will adopt, but it seems likely that it will be low capacity turbocharged engines. The sport can embrace the opportunity of a new engine formula in 2013 to produce a new generation of far more fuel efficient engines, which will benefit the motor industry and society in general.
from 2009 about the 2014 reg change
Big day tomorrow – December 4th, the meeting in Geneva of the 10 F1 team principals to finalise their proposals to the FIA World Council, which will sit on December 12th to decide on some major changes to Formula 1 for the future.
I know what you are thinking, it’s all a bit of a blur this; we haven’t had a chance to fully absorb the massive changes for 2009 yet and already we are potentially about to get a load of even more radical changes pushed onto us
This shows how all the teams were aware of the proposed engine changes, even the fans had a say - yet we hear from those ignorant about F1 that Ferrari were conned into it

[youtube]0Z9cK-N2y9E[/youtube]
and for those moaning that ferrari were conned or didnt have time to prepare, they had time to prepare innovative solutions and gloat about them
Ferrari looks to have come up with another of the big Formula 1 innovations of the 2014 season.
It emerged last week that the new Ferrari F14T features an unique cooling system that allows their new challenger to have very small sidepods, notwithstanding the extreme cooling demands of the all-new ‘Power Unit’ rules.
Now, La Gazzetta dello Sport reports that Ferrari’s new V6 turbo engine is also highly innovative.
The report said the engine features a ‘cut-off’ system that works with the direct injection to keep engine temperatures low and save crucial fuel.
The system means that, at times, the flow of fuel into the combustion chamber is stopped altogether and the engine is not sparked.