The point about sustainability is the main issue here. At the height of the cost race top budgets were four times of what they spend now and the average team budget was 40% higher. There is no way such expenditure could have been maintained. We would have lost Merc and Renault unless cuts had been made and Cosworth would not have come back.djos wrote:To stop car makers coming in and doing a BMW/Toyota/Honda and then vanishing - if a sensible budget cap is in place (eg 150 million) it makes the sport more sustainable and you dont end up with Ferrari etc spending 400 million per year!strad wrote:Let me ask the proponents..
WHY,,Should we have a budget cap at all?
I'd like a budget cap and more technical freedom to spice things up.
Well we could just have everyone develop their own engine, then abandon it and copy the best design. Ford stopped developing the V8, and Ferrari stopped developing the V10 so everyone would have the best engine design.strad wrote:Let me ask the proponents..
WHY,,Should we have a budget cap at all?
This was particularly well said. I give it the ridiculously overused and uncool +1 =D>bhallg2k wrote:Sure it is. LMP1 is still around. It may not be what some want it to be, but it's still here, nonetheless.
And the "what if" scenario of a field of Ferraris is quite simply preposterous, though I know exactly why it's portrayed as a sort of nightmare scenario. However, until the rules are changed to allow it, it simply cannot happen.
With one, and only one, exception, teams come and go in F1. That's been the case in the past; that's the case presently; and that will be the case well into the future. Participation in F1 is not a requirement for anyone, nor is there a mandate that any particular cross-section of nations or companies be represented.
The parting shots from teams that have withdrawn should be taken with a bit more than a grain of salt, because there's no way of really knowing if they left because of escalating budgets or due to a lack of success. With regard to recent history, I'd say it's likely more to do with the latter.
I guarantee that Honda would have stuck around for at least one more year had its board known that Brawn and the gang had a big time winner on their hands. Otherwise, Toyota and BMW left, because, frankly, they sucked. Terribly. They spent a lot of money to be that bad, too.
In fact, I submit that Toyota is the perfect example of why a budget cap in F1 is completely unnecessary. They were F1's biggest spender, and they still sucked.
Most importantly, I think, is the fact that it would never work anyway. Not in a million years. There's a reason why the FIA codifies the ban of a device by altering the specific regulations that govern the device, rather than just simply stating, X is prohibited." It's because the value, composition, purpose of X will always be subject to debate.
What's a budget cap? What's an expenditure? Can a team hire a driver with a contract worth $1 and then "donate" the rest of his pay to the "Driver X Foundation"? Can a team create a company, a la Red Bull Technology, that designs, builds and then licenses an F1 car to its parent company? What's a PR expense?
This is just how I see it. And this particular discussion should probably be split from the thread's topic.
Don't try common sense here. This is screw Ferrari territory.bhallg2k wrote:Sure it is. LMP1 is still around. It may not be what some want it to be, but it's still here, nonetheless.
And the "what if" scenario of a field of Ferraris is quite simply preposterous, though I know exactly why it's portrayed as a sort of nightmare scenario. However, until the rules are changed to allow it, it simply cannot happen.
With one, and only one, exception, teams come and go in F1. That's been the case in the past; that's the case presently; and that will be the case well into the future. Participation in F1 is not a requirement for anyone, nor is there a mandate that any particular cross-section of nations or companies be represented.
The parting shots from teams that have withdrawn should be taken with a bit more than a grain of salt, because there's no way of really knowing if they left because of escalating budgets or due to a lack of success. With regard to recent history, I'd say it's likely more to do with the latter.
I guarantee that Honda would have stuck around for at least one more year had its board known that Brawn and the gang had a big time winner on their hands. Otherwise, Toyota and BMW left, because, frankly, they sucked. Terribly. They spent a lot of money to be that bad, too.
In fact, I submit that Toyota is the perfect example of why a budget cap in F1 is completely unnecessary. They were F1's biggest spender, and they still sucked.
Most importantly, I think, is the fact that it would never work anyway. Not in a million years. There's a reason why the FIA codifies the ban of a device by altering the specific regulations that govern the device, rather than just simply stating, X is prohibited." It's because the value, composition, purpose of X will always be subject to debate.
What's a budget cap? What's an expenditure? Can a team hire a driver with a contract worth $1 and then "donate" the rest of his pay to the "Driver X Foundation"? Can a team create a company, a la Red Bull Technology, that designs, builds and then licenses an F1 car to its parent company? What's a PR expense?
This is just how I see it. And this particular discussion should probably be split from the thread's topic.
When it comes to folk's lives and well-being, I'm all for such catering. In fact, the more the better. But, in sports? Please.strad wrote:I think like so many things in today's world, it caters to the weak.
What a convincing argument! Perhaps we can now switch back to the issue of the 1.6L V6 turbo engine formula which is supposed to be the issue of this tread.bhallg2k wrote:...A budget cap is just a futile attempt to turn back the clock, and it's silly...
You're far too kind. It was nothing compared to your exquisite rebuttal.WhiteBlue wrote:What a convincing argument! Perhaps we can now switch back to the issue of the 1.6L V6 turbo engine formula which is supposed to be the issue of this tread.bhallg2k wrote:...A budget cap is just a futile attempt to turn back the clock, and it's silly...
irony wrote:The point about sustainability is the main issue here. At the height of the cost race top budgets were four times of what they spend now and the average team budget was 40% higher. There is no way such expenditure could have been maintained. We would have lost Merc and Renault unless cuts had been made and Cosworth would not have come back.
In a "what if" scenario we would not have only the whole field powered by Ferrari engines but also perhaps half the field driving old Ferrari chassis and one or two other constructors surviving. The whole field of cars would be down to 16 cars with many nations not having teams or drivers of their own on the grid.
Do we want such a development in F1? LMP1 shows us what unrestricted Darwinism does to top racing series. F1 did so much better than other series because they understood that an unlimited cost race is simply not sustainable.
I don't have a problem with the new 1.6 V6 turbo formula with fuel-flow limit, h*ll, I've been advocating that myself.WhiteBlue wrote:What a convincing argument! Perhaps we can now switch back to the issue of the 1.6L V6 turbo engine formula which is supposed to be the issue of this tread.bhallg2k wrote:...A budget cap is just a futile attempt to turn back the clock, and it's silly...