GitanesBlondes wrote:The reason for the blame on aero is because aero is what has caused costs to multiply at an unsustainable rate. Having locked in engines since the 2008 season isn't driving costs. Aero development is insanely expensive, and even more so when it comes to refining things for fractional gains.
This is only because under
the current regulations, putting money into aero development is
the most effective way of improving your car. If investing into
the engine,
the suspension, electronics, etc. provided more benefits,
the teams would refine those things to
the nth degree instead.
Pup wrote:Aesto wrote:can things get any worse than they are now?
Easily?
How? Let's assume
the budget cap is introduced.
Worst case: nothing changes, spending remains
the same. Somewhat likely.
Best case: all teams spend exactly
the same, F1 becomes a level playing field. Extremely unlikely.
Most likely case: Spending for
the top teams is nominally reduced by 50-80 million or whatever, but through loophole exploitation etc. they manage to bring that number down to 20 million. Even then,
the gap between
the biggest and
the smallest teams becomes a bit more narrow, ensuring a bit more success for
the likes of Sauber, Williams, etc. Perhaps we'll even lose a pay driver or two.
I mean, it really isn't that bad. F1 has survived for over a decade now with these budgets.
So survival is sufficient? We are currently in a situation where teams like Lotus and Sauber build very innovative cars (even Adrian Newey has praised their 2012 cars and stated that
the 2013 RB has taken a few cues from
the latter) but just can't compete at
the level they deserve to because they can't afford to keep R&D at
the same level as
the bigger teams throughout
the year. There has even been
the perverse situation where some of
the smaller teams were forced to vote against their own commercial interests (agreeing to in-season testing, from which
the likes of Sauber can't expect any competitive benefit) by their engine suppliers. Would it really be so bad if F1 didn't need pay drivers any more and, god forbid,
the teams might actually turn a profit?
And the budgets have remained roughly the same despite RRA's, rev limits, homologation, long-life engines, etc. Expenses don't track regulations. Oddly enough, they track income, much like any other endeavor.
Well, at least we're in agreement
about that
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