Uh, my point is that you could set up a financial arm made up of 20-30 F1 personnel and handful of bean counters and call that a huge organization outside of the cost cap. Those bean counters aren't going to know a lick about how much a part is worth in money or performance, and then you have the potential manipulation of what costs go toward the cap based on what your finance arm says how much a part cost or whether it was actually used or even benefitial.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑27 Jun 2023, 16:33
Maybe familiarise yourself with the rules first eh?
Section 3.1(i) All costs Directly Attributable to Human Resources Activities, Finance Activities or
Legal Activities are under special exemption.
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... -02-18.pdf
Right, so all that performance and development will come from Mick on the simulator as I had already mentioned. What other simulations can Toto run that don't cost money???? hrmmmmmdans79 wrote: ↑27 Jun 2023, 16:59Yes, and simulations don't always mean CFD.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑27 Jun 2023, 16:33
Maybe familiarise yourself with the rules first eh?
Section 3.1(i) All costs Directly Attributable to Human Resources Activities, Finance Activities or
Legal Activities are under special exemption.
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... -02-18.pdf
No, that's not what i said or implied!
everything costs money, because no one is getting free power to run the servers or pc.
One could have interns learning to use Dynos, combustion chamber CFD, and any number of things associated with V6 architecture, while developing the project one PU. Those people would then be able to be transferred to the 2026 power unit group with a much-reduced cost associated with training them.Skippon wrote: ↑27 Jun 2023, 19:54Th flow of IP and resource on Project One is (or rather was) F1 to HPPs Advanced Technology Group which is independent of the F1 programme andis nothing to do with Brackley. In any case this Power unit is a detuned 2016 one - so completely irrelevant to the 2025/6 programme never mind usage strategies NVH etc which are completely different in a series road car world
The issue with that line of thought is as follows.AR3-GP wrote: ↑28 Jun 2023, 04:52One could have interns learning to use Dynos, combustion chamber CFD, and any number of things associated with V6 architecture, while developing the project one PU. Those people would then be able to be transferred to the 2026 power unit group with a much-reduced cost associated with training them.
Considering that the 2026 PU has a budget cap, this would be a loophole.
In other words, if it was Merc doing something naughty and the FIA was looking to catch them, they failed miserably.These Power Unit Financial Regulations come into force on 1 January 2023. They form part of
the terms and conditions for the homologation of Power Units to be supplied to F1 Teams for
participation in the Championship from 2026 onwards. Each Power Unit Manufacturer
intending to homologate Power Units for supply to an F1 Team(s) for participation in the
Championship from 2026 onwards agrees to be bound by, and undertakes to comply with,
these Power Unit Financial Regulations from the start of its N-3 Full Year Reporting Period.
Unless I misread, your initial post was alluding to the size of their finance team and how it corroborates with the budget cap specifically the - "they need to be fed" comment. They're outside the ruling for budget caps, so they're being "fed" legitimately.ispano6 wrote: ↑28 Jun 2023, 01:26
Uh, my point is that you could set up a financial arm made up of 20-30 F1 personnel and handful of bean counters and call that a huge organization outside of the cost cap. Those bean counters aren't going to know a lick about how much a part is worth in money or performance, and then you have the potential manipulation of what costs go toward the cap based on what your finance arm says how much a part cost or whether it was actually used or even benefitial.
This cost was simply moved out of the F1 "operation" but other smaller teams probably can't afford such a huge organization or are able to do with a much smaller headcount. Which just makes Toto's comments about q "huge" organization seem suss.
I imagine you could easily place senior engineers in the financial arm of the team. Just say that their job is to greenlight projects based on cost, when what they are really doing is the same as before. That is, determine which projects (parts) are worth pursuing based on performance, car concept and cost. Let them do the same exact job under the guise of being a financial comptroller.ispano6 wrote: ↑28 Jun 2023, 01:26Uh, my point is that you could set up a financial arm made up of 20-30 F1 personnel and handful of bean counters and call that a huge organization outside of the cost cap. Those bean counters aren't going to know a lick about how much a part is worth in money or performance, and then you have the potential manipulation of what costs go toward the cap based on what your finance arm says how much a part cost or whether it was actually used or even benefitial.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑27 Jun 2023, 16:33
Maybe familiarise yourself with the rules first eh?
Section 3.1(i) All costs Directly Attributable to Human Resources Activities, Finance Activities or
Legal Activities are under special exemption.
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... -02-18.pdf
This cost was simply moved out of the F1 "operation" but other smaller teams probably can't afford such a huge organization or are able to do with a much smaller headcount. Which just makes Toto's comments about q "huge" organization seem suss.
So you're telling me you can't place an engineer in the financial department and then use that person to greenlight projects based on "cost control". From the outside it's impossible to tell the difference between, "this project is too expensive" and "this project won't yield enough performance".ValeVida46 wrote: ↑28 Jun 2023, 12:01Secondly, and to do with the reply, the bean counters aren't the arbiters of what goes on a car depending on performance. They are the arbiters of cost control. The role of leads in the tech department will be to work towards what is available, liaising daily/weekly/monthly with finance. It's really not rocket science.
Unless the "cost engineers" are running CFD and using WT time, they will be no better placed to assess a design than the team that designed it. And if the "cost engineers" are using CFD and WT time to check on things, then they obviously aren't assessing costs at all.Cs98 wrote: ↑28 Jun 2023, 12:40So you're telling me you can't place an engineer in the financial department and then use that person to greenlight projects based on "cost control". From the outside it's impossible to tell the difference between, "this project is too expensive" and "this project won't yield enough performance".ValeVida46 wrote: ↑28 Jun 2023, 12:01Secondly, and to do with the reply, the bean counters aren't the arbiters of what goes on a car depending on performance. They are the arbiters of cost control. The role of leads in the tech department will be to work towards what is available, liaising daily/weekly/monthly with finance. It's really not rocket science.
I imagine it would be extremely easy to set up a system whereby any early project idea must go through the financial department first for a "cost review". Now if that "cost review" is simply what it says, or also a "performance review" is quite hard to discern from the outside.
Cs98 wrote: ↑28 Jun 2023, 12:40So you're telling me you can't place an engineer in the financial department and then use that person to greenlight projects based on "cost control". From the outside it's impossible to tell the difference between, "this project is too expensive" and "this project won't yield enough performance".ValeVida46 wrote: ↑28 Jun 2023, 12:01Secondly, and to do with the reply, the bean counters aren't the arbiters of what goes on a car depending on performance. They are the arbiters of cost control. The role of leads in the tech department will be to work towards what is available, liaising daily/weekly/monthly with finance. It's really not rocket science.
I imagine it would be extremely easy to set up a system whereby any early project idea must go through the financial department first for a "cost review". Now if that "cost review" is simply what it says, or also a "performance review" is quite hard to discern from the outside.
Teams will know very well how much an upgrade costs before it even gets to CFD phase. Techs will also know through experience of the system how much upgrades will be to a fairly accurate degree. Why have an upside down system when you have known and quantifiable areas for budget requirements?