The cost per unit will lower with each additional unit, UNTIL the max capacity is reached. Anything above that capacity will require more manpower, more machinery, more storage. It'll end up with raising the cost/u again. Economies of scales will only work for a set range.GitanesBlondes wrote:Again, I'm not concerned about total costs per year of engines or anything of that nature.FoxHound wrote:You asked the question after making the statement.GitanesBlondes wrote:
Stick to answering the question that was asked.
Your statement is that engines were cheaper to produce in the halcyon days of the V10 citing Mario Illien as a source.
Now making the kind of assumptions you've made to conclude that, you'd need to forget about any of the current rules.
Like making an engine last roughly 4 GP weekends or 1600kms. Including free practice and qualifying.
How much you think it costs to build an engine like that versus one that only has to do 390kms?
Or having to add kers/hers?
Few hundred million just in that alone.
So when you compare an apple, with a pear... and ask questions...I'm gonna peel this banana and show you how silly it is to compare costings.
It's a simple question to answer, so stop trying to equivocate and answer it.
Is the cost per unit less to build 5 engines, or is it less to build 50?
GB, I get your point, but I need to correct you out of your too heavily defended argument. These aren't your ordinary ford, honda, whatever city cars coming from a horrendous long assembly line. The max capacity of these PU's will be very limited. It might infact just as well be that the average cost of producing 5 units is lower then the average cost of 50 units.