mendis wrote: ↑06 Mar 2023, 10:58
bas550 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2023, 10:51
Big Tea wrote: ↑06 Mar 2023, 04:12
A theoretical question, if anyone fancies a go at it.
What would happen if Merc said 'sod it, lets sort it' and ignored the cost cap?
Throw resources at it irrespective of limits, just get it sorted. It looks unlikely to be anywhere close to a title this year, so blow the budget and aim for the best car next year.
Huge fine? its just cash, they can absorb that no problem.
Exclusion from the season? I don't think anything other than winning means much to them, so no loss.
Next year they would then have a car not only competitive but probably in contention and have computers full of data that has been tested for following years.
Is it only this year they would be excluded form or could they face consecutive years exclusion? To me, anything else is not really a deterrent.
They may even be able to pass a lot of the cost off by spending what they saved on engineers on accountants
People seem to have the idea that because RB overspend by 400K, they're suddenly enjoying this big advantage.
RBR received a 7 million dollar fine and 10% CFD/windtunnel penalty. I have extreme doubts that Merc overspending by 400K will bring them anywhere near RB, or even aston at this point. So how much will it take? 4 million? Will Merc risk a 70 million dollar fine and 100% reduction in CFD/Windtunnel? 10 million? Will they risk 210 million dollar fine and 250% reduction? And who says 10 million is enough?
Given how they acted in the RBR case, one wonders what they'd say if they where caught spending more.
Hypothetically, of course.
They already have spent $140 million in 2022 (development + racing) and it's been status quo in quali and way worse in race. There are no signs of even minor chipping from the performance shortfall and rather an increase of deficit.
There is no guarantee that even if they spend another 10 million extra over RB, they can go on par.
That's exactly my point.
Vanja #66 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2023, 11:04
bas550 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2023, 10:51
People seem to have the idea that because RB overspend by 400K, they're suddenly enjoying this big advantage.
RBR received a 7 million dollar fine and 10% CFD/windtunnel penalty.
RB was more than 2m over, 7m fine was not included in the 2022 budget cap and 10% ATR penalty is insignificant, aerodynamicists simply think twice what to test and waste no runs on "let's try this, maybe it works but not sure". So the penalty was a slap on the wrist at best, but it was actually a very stern finger wagging
As per the FIA themselves:
FIA wrote:The FIA acknowledges that had RBR applied the correct treatment within its Full Year Reporting Documentation of RBR’s Notional Tax Credit within its 2021 submission of a value of £1,431,348, it would have been considered by the Cost Cap Administration to be in compliance with Article 4.1(b) of the Regulations and therefore RBR’s Relevant Costs for the 2021 Reporting Period would have in fact exceeded the 2021 Cost Cap by £432,652 (0.37%).
As per Toto Wolff, who said last year that Ferrari having 15% more tunnel runs available than Mercedes buys them 2 tenths (70% vs 95%). Red Bull for 2023, by finishing first and then having another 10% cut...this is now not a penalty at all? So RBR has 63% available and next nearest team 75%, and Mercedes 80%.
People need to make their mind up and not pick and choose when something is a slap on the wrist or when it isn't.
Yes, RBR is massively ahead now but to throw this all on a minor breach is hilarious, even a minor percentage of it.