xpensive wrote:Still WB, the most cost effective solution for everyone involved would be to stick with the current engines, if Cosworth loses Williams next year, there's no way in the world they will develop a new engine for two cutomers, two shaky ones at that. The other problem is probably that the new envelope wasn't enough to persuade VW to commit, nobody else either it seems.
The failure to define a sensible way into the future killed BMW's role in F1 and prevented VW to join. Both companies have decided that they are not interested in a bottomless pit that sucks in unlimited amounts of money for obsolete technology. There is a consensus in the German automotive industry on the top level that the proper way to tackle the industry problems for this decade is a radical approach to fuel efficiency. If you look at outstanding products which make money it is not an electric or hybrid car. It is a smartly designed conventional ICE driven car with superior
performance and fuel economy. Efficient dynamics is not just a slogan, it is a philosophy.
If F1 wants to attract relevant automotive players such as Honda, BMW, Porsche, Audi and even Aston Martin there is no alternative to committing itself to technology that is relevant to those players. And F1 needs to respect that it cannot rip them off the way CVC is currently doing it and Bernie has done that all the time. Those guys are operating in the toughest economic environment that you can imagine and they have egos to match. A guy like Piech will not play Bernie's bitch and say thank you for it.
So I'm afraid my take is completely different on the engine issue. New technology is long overdue by five years in my book when the FiA promised the automotive industry relevance and was stopped by FOTA to deliver it. Clinging to obsolete technology will not attract the good guys that would re vitalize the series. Only the chance of success for a limited amount of spending in a stable framework with relevant technology will do that.