Pingguest wrote:What source does support your statement that the 2014 engines are (in real terms, hence not nominal!) more expensive than the 2000 V10-engines, GitanesBlondes?
Why, Mario Illien himself was the one who said that he could produce 100 V10's in the year 2000 for the same price teams are paying for only 8 engines in the 2.4L V8 formula. The 5 engines in the 1.6L V6 formula are going to cost even more than the 2.4L V8's will.
Regardless, the locked engine formula is among the biggest con jobs in F1 history from a purely financial perspective.
I have mentioned previously that the cost per unit goes down the more a unit is produced; making a 1,000 of something has a lower cost per unit than making 100 of the same thing. If F1 was really interested in any reasonable cost-cutting, they'd be allowing open season on the number of engines a team can use for the whole season, as well as development.
If you want the sport as spectacle and as pushing technology, then it's time to bring back the qualifying specials running 5 BAR for 2 laps. Nothing innovates more than open engine development, and nothing adds more to the spectacle than engines running 900-1000BHP in race trim.
If you want a stagnant, and technologically irrelevant race formula, by all means, the FIA should continue on the path that that wise sage Mosley set things upon.