i know that F1 race engineers are rated well and sould be earning quite a lot as they work a lot.......
But i was wondering........the race engineers in Gp2.....do they also work as hard as the F1 engineers...and how are they paid?????
I meant $80K US; should have stated that earlier in my post. Again, that is an average, but what may make that number intersting is that I forgot if those numbers figured in the salaries of the top drivers. Still, 80K US, at least to me, is a lot, especially for an F1 job.miqi23 wrote:West, I am sure you are talking about those top guys earning 80 grand or so. These are top people like Race Engineers and Designers with loads of experience.
To answer mep's question, I believe it all depends on experience. You may start low but will get pay rises once you prove your self. Moreover, if you are considering applying for a position in an F1 team and expecting a so called 'noname' salary, I would say something in the 20s or may be 19 which is not bad to be honest. However, similar amounts or perhaps more can be earned from different and less demanding jobs.
A Motorsport consultancy that I know of pays about 24k to an Aero Engineer with good experience, which according to me is less. Another Motorsport Aero company which had worked with four F1 teams in the past offers 21K to a new Aero Engineer with an MSc and 22K to the same Engineer with a PhD.
It is peanuts but once you learn how they do things you can change jobs and earn more...
Sorry, I meant 24K in GBP and not US DollarsWest wrote:I meant $80K US; should have stated that earlier in my post. Again, that is an average, but what may make that number intersting is that I forgot if those numbers figured in the salaries of the top drivers. Still, 80K US, at least to me, is a lot, especially for an F1 job.miqi23 wrote:West, I am sure you are talking about those top guys earning 80 grand or so. These are top people like Race Engineers and Designers with loads of experience.
To answer mep's question, I believe it all depends on experience. You may start low but will get pay rises once you prove your self. Moreover, if you are considering applying for a position in an F1 team and expecting a so called 'noname' salary, I would say something in the 20s or may be 19 which is not bad to be honest. However, similar amounts or perhaps more can be earned from different and less demanding jobs.
A Motorsport consultancy that I know of pays about 24k to an Aero Engineer with good experience, which according to me is less. Another Motorsport Aero company which had worked with four F1 teams in the past offers 21K to a new Aero Engineer with an MSc and 22K to the same Engineer with a PhD.
It is peanuts but once you learn how they do things you can change jobs and earn more...
per year I'm afraid, no doubt they all deserve that much per month for the 72+ hours the engineers work but the teams don't see it that way.guys, are these salaries per month or per year? because both ways it's ridiculous!