Well thought out and presented, 321. I agree with all your points.
Your only failing is assuming that the PTB in Formula One act rationally. There is ample evidence to suggest that they do not. :-"
If that's the F1 where most every race is decided in the first corner, then I say bring on the detonations.321apex wrote:Instead, this expensive technological hurdle may do in the F1 as we know it.
Not wanting to side track too much from the subject of this post I will add:Pup wrote: I'll gladly welcome some small suspense in not knowing whether the front runner will make it to the end of the race.
The expensive technological hurdle is what once made F1 special, what we have now pales in comparison.321apex wrote:Instead, this expensive technological hurdle may do in the F1 as we know it.
What criteria do you base your statement upon? Objective financial information is hard to come by in tightly lipped world of F1, however a simple rule still applies. If we agree that last years engine made approx. 720hp out of 2.4L displ. yielding around 300hp/L, then the power density in theory this year is going to be 375hp/L or in practice closer to 400hp/L. This power density alone increases net cost 30-50% plus you have the expensive and uncharted territory of ERS hardware and pricey learning curve.Mysticf1 wrote:
The expensive technological hurdle is what once made F1 special, what we have now pales in comparison.
Thanks for bringing this up and clarifying it. I had forgotten the 5M cost ceiling.WillerZ wrote:From 2010 to 2013 the engine price was standardised at €5M per year for customer engines: this was agreed by the manufacturers in exchange for the FIA dropping a plan to introduce spec engines in 2010.
Until relatively recent times F1 allowed teams / manufacturers to push the envelope, not because the rules said too use a particular technology, they did it to win. The first run of turbos in the 80s, active suspension, qualifying engines the list goes on. The major difference we have here is a sudden fundamental change in technology. If teams were free to go in the turbo / hybrid direction for performance reasons without being forced, it would have been a more incremental change. No testing and homologation certainly doesn't help either.321apex wrote:What criteria do you base your statement upon?Mysticf1 wrote:
The expensive technological hurdle is what once made F1 special, what we have now pales in comparison.
Pure Speculation.321apex wrote:Has anyone come across any publicly announced data regarding planned budgets ($) by the three distinct F1 engine suppliers?
If I could make a loosely based silver bullet prediction it would go like this:
Mercedes and Ferrari had HIGHER motivation to succeed in the new F1 engine formula than Renault. Why?
- Mercedes has deep pockets and has to be the BEST- so they spared no expense at doing this
- Ferrari is also well funded and their F1 sporting prestige is fundamental to their very existence
This leaves Renault, whom is no longer a team, just a parts supplier.
In my speculative theory, of those three, Renault budgeted least amount of money to do this new F1 engine program and it begins to show.
yep, just that.mkable1370 wrote:Pure Speculation.321apex wrote:Has anyone come across any publicly announced data regarding planned budgets ($) by the three distinct F1 engine suppliers?
If I could make a loosely based silver bullet prediction it would go like this:
Mercedes and Ferrari had HIGHER motivation to succeed in the new F1 engine formula than Renault. Why?
- Mercedes has deep pockets and has to be the BEST- so they spared no expense at doing this
- Ferrari is also well funded and their F1 sporting prestige is fundamental to their very existence
This leaves Renault, whom is no longer a team, just a parts supplier.
In my speculative theory, of those three, Renault budgeted least amount of money to do this new F1 engine program and it begins to show.