https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/f ... 0629269614
This is a good interview with newey. He talks a bit about alonso too.
Even if there may not be a 33rd win or third title, seeing them work together will be (almost) good enough for me. I can't wait to see Alonso giving Newey car feedback with his usual hand gestures Alonso's massive experience coupled with Newey's understanding could be something to watch...zoroastar wrote: ↑06 Sep 2024, 02:58https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/f ... 0629269614
This is a good interview with newey. He talks a bit about alonso too.
Newey is already secretly working whit some advice on 2024 car.
Top teams employ more than a thousand people, not including the engine department (for those teams that make PUs). Even if three top salaries are exempt from the cost cap. Naturally, they are unable to fit them all under the cap.
Yes
Cowell sighed as a CEO. So I think he is getting paid along the lines that Whitmarsh was. Remember, he was a PU guru, CEO is finance stuff.Nikosar wrote: ↑06 Sep 2024, 12:23Top teams employ more than a thousand people, not including the engine department (for those teams that make PUs). Even if three top salaries are exempt from the cost cap. Naturally, they are unable to fit them all under the cap.
There are massive "loophooles" to avoid the cap, that Szafnauer at the time said that "Effectively, there is no Cap"
All the teams have 68–70 members working full time and all the other, the remaining 900+, are under other entities and "on paper" only working part time for the F1 team : E.g. 10% for F1 90% other projects, which means only 10% of salary counts towards the budget cap.
This is only one example, Mercedes has 46 people working on the cap and obviously they have multiple of way to avoid the cap.
It looks like for 2026 FIA will add new rules.
I think there was or will be a change in regulations. From 2026 onwards part-time engineers won't count with part-salary. If an engineer only works for an hour on the F1-project, his full salary counts for the budget capNikosar wrote: ↑06 Sep 2024, 12:23Top teams employ more than a thousand people, not including the engine department (for those teams that make PUs). Even if three top salaries are exempt from the cost cap. Naturally, they are unable to fit them all under the cap.
There are massive "loophooles" to avoid the cap, that Szafnauer at the time said that "Effectively, there is no Cap"
All the teams have 68–70 members working full time and all the other, the remaining 900+, are under other entities and "on paper" only working part time for the F1 team : E.g. 10% for F1 90% other projects, which means only 10% of salary counts towards the budget cap.
This is only one example, Mercedes has 46 people working on the cap and obviously they have multiple of way to avoid the cap.
It looks like for 2026 FIA will add new rules.
If true, I'd say that will not be applicable for a long time. FIA and other teams will intervene.