Merc still makes a V12 for the Mercedes-maybach. There was an engine they could have used if they were interested in this. They are not.
Merc still makes a V12 for the Mercedes-maybach. There was an engine they could have used if they were interested in this. They are not.
Marketing, obviously. Unlike other sideline projects, it has a fairly traditional approach to aero - unlike side projects by another team of course.
Too heavy, too large, not a motorsport engine. Pagani use a Merc road car V12 but that's a different sort of vehicle. I'm saying, since the goal was to drop in an F1 engine: an NA formula could have provided something interesting. AMG One is probably the first road car in recent history to use an actual F1 engine tuned for road regs; partly due to improved manufacturing available today. So, hypothetically an NA 8+ cyl dropped in with mild hybrid, like a GMA T.50 except +5k on the red end of the tachometer.
That's your definition, by assuming there was an intent to cheat, which FIA denied. Read the reports. Official reports doesn't mention any of that, intact they are contrary to it.denyall wrote: ↑28 Jun 2023, 19:59The cost cap is a rule, violation of rules in sport is cheating. Whatever political spin RB or the FIA put on things to keep the big $$ happy is irrelevant.mendis wrote:Did FIA term 'cost cap breach' as 'cheating'? Opinion and facts should be differentiated.ValeVida46 wrote: ↑28 Jun 2023, 18:29And I am glad you support actionable sanction against cheating, just concerned that there may be a heavy bias in your suggestions of unsubstantiated wrongdoing.
The FIA said there was “no accusation or evidence” that Red Bull had “sought at any time to act in bad faith, dishonestly or in a fraudulent manner, nor has it wilfully concealed any information from the Cost Cap Administration.”
As I said, whatever fluff the FIA and RB put out to make themselves feel better and keep sponsors happy is irrelevant. If you spend more than was allowed it's cheating, otherwise why give a penalty at all. If it truly doesn't matter then no punishment would be needed. Obviously the other nine teams and the FIA do think it matters.mendis wrote:That's your definition, by assuming there was an intent to cheat, which FIA denied. Read the reports. Official reports doesn't mention any of that, intact they are contrary to it.
https://us.motorsport.com/f1/news/cost- ... 0in%202021.The FIA said there was “no accusation or evidence” that Red Bull had “sought at any time to act in bad faith, dishonestly or in a fraudulent manner, nor has it wilfully concealed any information from the Cost Cap Administration.”
I don't see 49 people as a huge finance arm.ispano6 wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 06:15Mercedes AMG openly acknowledged their Formula E involvement greatly contributed to their battery and recovery for the hybrid power units. It was possibly the only team benefitting from involvement in both series (Renault may have benefited from Nissan as well). Honda did pass hybrid knowledge from F1 to SuperGT, though it doesn't appear to have the other way around. Unfortunately only a spec series or energy store can ensure equality but that also takes away from the spirit of innovation and technological advances.
The issue of course here is that smaller teams can't afford a HUGE finance arm Toto is trumpeting about, and that the costs associated to run it must also be huge since beancounters seem to be well paid. Costs that normally would go towards the F1 team have simply been diverted and playing field really isn't leveled anymore than previous eras.
Another case in point is the fact that Allison and Elliott being interchangeable, where Allison having stepped back last season and not being a part of payroll but being everpresent at races was telling. Since both are on the payroll this season I imagine some people had to be moved away from being involved in F1.
You are just repeating your interpretation here, your disagreement seems to be with the FIA on how they defined the breach.denyall wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 05:00As I said, whatever fluff the FIA and RB put out to make themselves feel better and keep sponsors happy is irrelevant. If you spend more than was allowed it's cheating, otherwise why give a penalty at all. If it truly doesn't matter then no punishment would be needed. Obviously the other nine teams and the FIA do think it matters.mendis wrote:That's your definition, by assuming there was an intent to cheat, which FIA denied. Read the reports. Official reports doesn't mention any of that, intact they are contrary to it.
https://us.motorsport.com/f1/news/cost- ... 0in%202021.The FIA said there was “no accusation or evidence” that Red Bull had “sought at any time to act in bad faith, dishonestly or in a fraudulent manner, nor has it wilfully concealed any information from the Cost Cap Administration.”
Further, the definition of cheating: "act dishonestly or unfairly in order to gain an advantage, especially in a game or examination." No where do we find reference to intent or fault, but we do find reference to fairness.
It is perfectly fair to call budget overspend cheating, because that is what it is.
Feelings are not facts.denyall wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 05:00As I said, whatever fluff the FIA and RB put out to make themselves feel better and keep sponsors happy is irrelevant. If you spend more than was allowed it's cheating, otherwise why give a penalty at all. If it truly doesn't matter then no punishment would be needed. Obviously the other nine teams and the FIA do think it matters.mendis wrote:That's your definition, by assuming there was an intent to cheat, which FIA denied. Read the reports. Official reports doesn't mention any of that, intact they are contrary to it.
https://us.motorsport.com/f1/news/cost- ... 0in%202021.The FIA said there was “no accusation or evidence” that Red Bull had “sought at any time to act in bad faith, dishonestly or in a fraudulent manner, nor has it wilfully concealed any information from the Cost Cap Administration.”
Further, the definition of cheating: "act dishonestly or unfairly in order to gain an advantage, especially in a game or examination." No where do we find reference to intent or fault, but we do find reference to fairness.
It is perfectly fair to call budget overspend cheating, because that is what it is.
If a finance team is sending you on a conspiracy spiral, wait till you find out that Red Bull has a whole second team on the grid where Helmet Marko just yesterday said their own ideas and developments aren’t helpful and they should follow the main team. By your calculations that must then be 300mil going into the Red Bull development no? Strange because I don’t see those posts in the Red Bull team thread…ispano6 wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 06:15Mercedes AMG openly acknowledged their Formula E involvement greatly contributed to their battery and recovery for the hybrid power units. It was possibly the only team benefitting from involvement in both series (Renault may have benefited from Nissan as well). Honda did pass hybrid knowledge from F1 to SuperGT, though it doesn't appear to have the other way around. Unfortunately only a spec series or energy store can ensure equality but that also takes away from the spirit of innovation and technological advances.
The issue of course here is that smaller teams can't afford a HUGE finance arm Toto is trumpeting about, and that the costs associated to run it must also be huge since beancounters seem to be well paid. Costs that normally would go towards the F1 team have simply been diverted and playing field really isn't leveled anymore than previous eras.
Another case in point is the fact that Allison and Elliott being interchangeable, where Allison having stepped back last season and not being a part of payroll but being everpresent at races was telling. Since both are on the payroll this season I imagine some people had to be moved away from being involved in F1.
If a driver drivers across a chicane in order to save several seconds, is that cheating? The rules say you shouldn't do it. The stewards may punish you with a penalty. But nowhere in the FIA documents will it say " the driver cheated". It will use phrases such as "gained an advantage".mendis wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 07:35Feelings are not facts.denyall wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 05:00As I said, whatever fluff the FIA and RB put out to make themselves feel better and keep sponsors happy is irrelevant. If you spend more than was allowed it's cheating, otherwise why give a penalty at all. If it truly doesn't matter then no punishment would be needed. Obviously the other nine teams and the FIA do think it matters.mendis wrote: That's your definition, by assuming there was an intent to cheat, which FIA denied. Read the reports. Official reports doesn't mention any of that, intact they are contrary to it.
https://us.motorsport.com/f1/news/cost- ... 0in%202021.
Further, the definition of cheating: "act dishonestly or unfairly in order to gain an advantage, especially in a game or examination." No where do we find reference to intent or fault, but we do find reference to fairness.
It is perfectly fair to call budget overspend cheating, because that is what it is.
Apples Vs Oranges.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 08:43If a driver drivers across a chicane in order to save several seconds, is that cheating? The rules say you shouldn't do it. The stewards may punish you with a penalty. But nowhere in the FIA documents will it say " the driver cheated". It will use phrases such as "gained an advantage".mendis wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 07:35Feelings are not facts.denyall wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 05:00
As I said, whatever fluff the FIA and RB put out to make themselves feel better and keep sponsors happy is irrelevant. If you spend more than was allowed it's cheating, otherwise why give a penalty at all. If it truly doesn't matter then no punishment would be needed. Obviously the other nine teams and the FIA do think it matters.
Further, the definition of cheating: "act dishonestly or unfairly in order to gain an advantage, especially in a game or examination." No where do we find reference to intent or fault, but we do find reference to fairness.
It is perfectly fair to call budget overspend cheating, because that is what it is.
By your position, such a driver isn't cheating by his actions.
I picked up on this too and wondered what the chances were of a shared pool of engineers from RBT working for RBR and AT (if the team moves some/most/all of its base to England). Or staff are employed at one or the other teams and then zero gardening leave for flipping between either team?Puffpirat wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 08:08If a finance team is sending you on a conspiracy spiral, wait till you find out that Red Bull has a whole second team on the grid where Helmet Marko just yesterday said their own ideas and developments aren’t helpful and they should follow the main team. By your calculations that must then be 300mil going into the Red Bull development no? Strange because I don’t see those posts in the Red Bull team thread…
A good point. Artificial labels don't overcome the overt act.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 08:43If a driver drivers across a chicane in order to save several seconds, is that cheating? The rules say you shouldn't do it. The stewards may punish you with a penalty. But nowhere in the FIA documents will it say " the driver cheated". It will use phrases such as "gained an advantage".
By your position, such a driver isn't cheating by his actions.
Can you imagine this scenario for Mercedes? The fallout on this thread would need years of decontaminationPuffpirat wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 08:08If a finance team is sending you on a conspiracy spiral, wait till you find out that Red Bull has a whole second team on the grid where Helmet Marko just yesterday said their own ideas and developments aren’t helpful and they should follow the main team. By your calculations that must then be 300mil going into the Red Bull development no? Strange because I don’t see those posts in the Red Bull team thread…
Hope, surely??PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑29 Jun 2023, 06:42I don't see 49 people as a huge finance arm.
And how do you know who is on the Mercedes Payroll?
Just know that Mercedes is safely beneath the budget cap unlike certain teams...