We.....will be vastly different to .... Marussia and Caterham
"Our business model in Formula One is based on our Nascar race team where we use other people's engines and chassis," Haas said.
Correct, but:
"As part of its application to compete in the 2010 FIA Formula One , Hispania agreed technical partnerships with Dallara and Xtrac. Cosworth provides the engines.
"other people's engines and chassis" - Didn't really work out well for HRT tho.
Agreed, they had a vastly different financial situation which was the core of their failure (unsufficient funds). I don't think Haas should think they are inventing the wheel with phrases like this:
"If we do it right we will look like geniuses."
When in reality, they aren't doing anything new, at all. Neither did HRT back then, because in the early 90's it happened, and Toro Rosso essentially - before the rules prohibited this possibility - had 'RedBulls chassis' and 'Ferrari's' engine.
Did that work? Actually, yes. Is it new? no, not at all. So...genius? hardly.
"To me the new teams are just so far behind that they can't even catch up,"
Except for the fact that dispite all the setbacks they had from the start after the broken promises on budget,
and the insane spending required for 2014, Marussia actually passed Sauber in the 2014 standings - even though they got DSQ for not participating in enough rounds.
In 2012 Kovalainen made it into Q2 a couple of times by beating one of the Toro Rossos. His best result was 13th place finish at Monaco. Not so far behind then, i'd say.
Especially knowing that outside of the 107% rule is 'too far behind', yet all of them managed to constantly be within that 107% rule (by a fair margin actually).
Again - the root of problems for the backmarkers were finances. Thus stating 'the news teams were too far behind that they couldn't catch up' is essentially untrue. The finances of these teams weren't adequate enough to provide for their survival. Their 'results' were not neccesarily paired to this.
I said it before and i'll say it again;
Haas is ignorantly boasting before even having done a single thing.
I like the fact they have a ferrari partnership for parts and sorted this out. I like the fact they have an engine deal and sorted that out. I like the fact they have a chassis builder to sort that out.
What i don't like is that they act like they 'have it in the bag' because they've done these simple things that a team like HRT had, too. Meanwhile, Virgin F1 team had more financial backing then Haas could dream of.
What i'd like to see is Haas just showing solid proof of their current progress, without arrogantly boasting. Let your work do the talking. If you do that, and you actually turn out to perform better compared to your predecessors, then you are a genius. Then you can talk why and how you did things.
I'd really really like to see a successfull American Team. I really do. I really would like to see a new team rise to become atleast 'decent'. But because of the history of American Team entries in the past, and the paired failure and disappointment, you'd expect a little bit more conservity.
acosmichippo wrote:
I don't understand how you arrived at that conclusion.
According to the first half of your post, HRT, Caterham/Lotus, and Virgin/Marussia folded ultimately because they were promised a cost cap that never came to fruition. They were not financially prepared to run outside of a cost cap, and definitely not for the new power regulations in 2014.
exactly. Therefore, if your pockets are filled and you have a big budget, kicking to the shins of the underdog - no longer there to defend themselves - is imho a wrong and low thing to do.
In contrast, Haas (as far as we know) has entered F1 without any such promises. He is fully aware of the costs associated, he has money, and he has a plan to keep costs as low as possible by using Ferrari parts as much as possible. To me, that seems like a much more stable financial situation than the 2010 entries ever had.
Except we don't know how much these ferrari parts actually cost. I'm quite confident these ferrari parts will definately be much more expensive then the parts caterham or marussia used for their car. Actually, all the former backmarkers had several cooperations and 'partnerships' with excisting, stable teams. Mclaren and Ferrari, for example.
Meanwhile, it did little for their 'progress'.
Or, it might actually did do them great progress yet we did not know about this.
The end is still the same; Haas is entering a different F1 then the backmarkers did, and Haas can enter F1 with a whole bucket of better finances then any of these other cars had (or, so it be in their struggling final years atleast). Meanwhile, just how much money is Haas going to 'throw at it'?
It's concidered Haas' financial situation and backing is better than that of their predecessors. But is this actually true? Haas said he 'wasn't just going to throw money at it'. So, Haas' CNC company may have a big budget - but just how much budget is Haas planning or accepting to spend for his F1 foray? It wouldn't surprise me if that would be immensely slimmer then most here are simply taking for granted.