AR3-GP wrote: ↑07 Sep 2023, 20:28
dialtone wrote: ↑07 Sep 2023, 20:27
AR3-GP wrote:
Ferrari had unlimited spending between 2009 and 2020 and never won a title. The cost cap isn't the issue.
Respond on the merit not what you think is that I’m thinking. I have no expectation that Ferrari would win a championship if this was changed, they have other problems.
Understood, it is not just a single team with this problem. Freeing the cost cap, at best would just let Mercedes and Ferrari spending 500 million dollars again, to maybe or maybe not catch RB who would also be unshackled. It would then further isolate Alpine, Mclaren, and Aston Martin and this is simply a non-starter. No one will vote for it! I do not see the merits of discussing it.
There's no point discussing anything, we're not FIA or FOM
.
Those are 2 extremes though and only managed off of pure spend numbers. Considering engine development is also capped in costs but it clearly ended up having a balanced grid, you could conclude that there is probably a better way to handle a cost capped setup that doesn't hurt competition for the top spot. Off the top of my head:
1) share/open source winning car blueprints at end of the season
2) allow cost cap to have a multi-year variable component, e.g. borrow from future years
3) engines have reliability clauses, could there be a "I effed up the concept bad" clause?
4) have budget cap be dependent on championship position like wind tunnel time is.
5) have budget cap be higher on year 1 of regulation changes and decrease on year 2+.
(and more)