Great news.
The budget cap was a completely unfeasible idea that was not even close to being rooted in reality.
Lets not go to far off topic.GitanesBlondes wrote:
Do you know if the increase in sales for Mercedes were in emerging markets or already established markets? S
Plus there is the decreasing in entry price that Mercedes is now committing to, in order to try and increase sales in America. You can now get a base CLA250 for $29,900. I have no doubt it will help boost sales, but it sort of cheapens the brand no?
But in any event, I think they'd like to have the half a billion or so they've spent on F1 back for other more pressing needs. Most Mercedes owners I know in this area do not even know of the F1 team, or care about such things. They don't buy Mercedes models because of motorsport linkage.
Nothing. It was a perfect race in itself. You just have to disregard the bloody venue which the FiA is not responsible for picking. That is Bernie's doing. Did anyone notice the empty grandstands? I hope the judge in Munich will get Bernie quick and put him away as they did with Uli Hoeness (Bayern Munich manager) who cheated by at least 30 mil € on his tax bill. 40 mil € bribe is in the same league. So Bernie should do time at the German people's pleasure as Uli is now doing (3,5 years by the way).FoxHound wrote:..I'm just wondering what the anti F1 2014 lobby can come up with next in light of such a good spectacle today.
BUT!! BUT!!! All the idiots of this forum tell me the FIA make the rules and that the FIA are to blame for the fuel restriction, and the fuel saving, and the quiet cars and all the tech restrictions, but if Todt, the head of FIA, wanted a cost cap why did he not just impose it since he is FIA? Could it be that the loud idiots of this forum that constantly point at the FIA are wrong? And that the FIA does not make the rules but rather the teams? hmmm imagine that, the loudest idiots being the wrongest ones, when does that ever happen? Aren't those the same loud idiots that were decrying horrible racing in 2014 F1?Formula 1's plans for a cost cap in 2015 have been abandoned, FIA president Jean Todt has revealed.
The FIA announced at the end of last year that it wanted a cost cap in place for next season, with it hoped agreement on how it could be enforced reached by June 2014.
But AUTOSPORT has learned that the six team representatives on F1's Strategy Group - Red Bull, Ferrari, Mercedes, Williams, McLaren, and Lotus - wrote to the FIA last month to say they did not believe plans for a budget cap were realistic.
They claimed that enforcing and policing a budget cap that would satisfactorily cover all the teams was impossible, and instead suggested that cost cuts should be made through technical and sporting regulations.
Attending his first grand prix of the season in Bahrain on Sunday, Todt confirmed that the teams had informed him of their belief.
And with him needing team support to push a cost cap through F1's Strategy Group he felt there was no point trying to press on with the idea.
"Most of the teams were in favour of the cost cap, but I understand that all the teams that are part of the Strategy Group are against it now," he said.
"So clearly, if the commercial rights holder, and if six teams, which means 12 of 18 are against, I cannot impose it. It's mathematics. So in this case, no more cost cap."
Todt said he had hoped the cost cap would work, as he thinks it will be harder to achieve the necessary budget restriction through regulation tweaks.
He added: "Am I disappointed? In a way I am disappointed because it may be more difficult to achieve the reduction which I feel is needed.
"But everyone says we are all in favour of reducing the cost, and through sporting and technical regulations."
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/113319
Can you just shut down a factory with 400-500 engineers over night? Will Merc or Daimler board agree to throw away all their past year investment at a time when they are experiencing the fruits of their hard work?xpensive wrote:Mercedes is out after this season, hence the presence of Lauda and Wolff, after that MrE will take his "Formula 1" as a private enterprise with CVC. MrT has known about these plans for years, which is why he has kept such a low profile.
Which is the more likely scenario? (Honestly.)FoxHound wrote:[...]
I'm just wondering what the anti F1 2014 lobby can come up with next in light of such a good spectacle today.
Remain a sceptic, questioning leads to answers.bhall wrote:Just as skeptics, such as myself, have perhaps been a bit too quick to jump to conclusions, so too can supporters.
I question Neweys' rationale in thinking burning fuel in an exhaust chamber is rational or relevant or somehow superior in execution to give him the gall to say the above?Newey also questioned the rationale behind the changes to hybrid turbos, questioning the free credentials of the changes, the relevance of the technology and the cost,
I'm very aware that I'm an old fart, but when I was young and handsome F1 was ike this;bhall wrote:Which is the more likely scenario? (Honestly.)FoxHound wrote:[...]
I'm just wondering what the anti F1 2014 lobby can come up with next in light of such a good spectacle today.
...
I agree to an extent. But then after 5 years of a Formula, you'd expect the gap to close to the leaders, and well it just didn't happen last year. Especially the last 9 races where Vettel won the lot.bhall wrote:What do you expect from a pig but a grunt, yanno?
I just want to see good racing and fast cars. Previous formulae supplied the latter in spades, and every once in a while we got a good dose of the former. Thus far this season, two of three races have failed to live up to either standard, and I think the success of the third owes a great deal to the nature of the track on which it was raced, which kinda ironic considering most folks didn't have very much affection for Tilke's recipe of straights and stops until now.
I guess we'll see how it all plays out.