Hail22 wrote:Manoah2u wrote:that's rediculous, 650k for just a piece of carbon seat, essentially. and they might write them off one or 2 times during the year depending on what happens. in hamiltons' case, that merc cell must have been 1,3 million 'coz he got a fresh one just for the remainder 2 races :s that's 68.000 per race, without engine.
your average F1 car is € 1.372.000,00 EUR > WITHOUT TIRES, ENGINE.
5 engines a year, at least 5 million each, is 25 million eur, still wihout tires.
so it's 26.372.000,00 EUR. already. Tires are 1 million each season.
so in essence, we have € 27.4 MILLION EURO per F1 car having not counted
development costs [new wings and stuff], not having counted crash damage,
and surely lots of more is missed, like fuel. You need 2 of them however,
so 54,8 lets say € 55 MILLION for just 2 cars to run. thats...........INSANE
That's why its been stressed many times to Bernie Ecclestone and the FIA to start seriously thinking of a budget cap in Formula 1 in order to create some form of sustainability.
But this has already been discussed many of times, some agree, some don't but I do hope someday that the Formula will one day adopt a sustainable yet practical budget cap to fall in line with a more "greener" and "practical" car industry we currently have.
A 2012 HRT 112 was rumoured to be €2m without Engine, Gearbox and the KERS that it was designed for and never took on. They had 3 of them, of which one was written off by KAR. A Red Bull RB8 was estimated to be €4.5m to €5m without engine, gearbox and KERS. Gearboxes are €350k, Engines are on average €450k and a KERS system is €125k per battery and €25,000 per MGU. So another €1.05m in essence there.
I am in belief that there should be a budget cap, update bans on the first four and last 7 races and stringent limits placed on the teams. As Mr Saward said today on his blog, F1 should be budet capped and bout how efficient the teams are with their money, and id say resources.
However, i believe more can be done, like banning of Mission Controls, and introduction of a standardised telemetry system and all teams having one part they manufacture for the whole grid, McLaren for the MES ECU, Red Bull for the side impact structures.
I think costs of the top seams could be reduced by 20% easy, as Ferrari spend $402m last year, and the lower teams could save slightly less, but its still a saving for them on budgets of €75m for Marussia to €140m for Force India. The top 5 teams spent in excess of €200m each, Red Bull at a surprising €260m estimate. But that value will be known in January once the Austrian authorities publish the full accounts as per Austrian law. UK law says April, where accounts are also published.