I just struggle to see why Mercedes & Red Bull would agree to allow Ferrari a further two engines pounding round tens of thousands of kilometres giving them more data though.turbof1 wrote:I don't think the other teams will lodge protest. The car will be lucky to end up within the 107% rule as it stands, so competition-wise the others will have no concerns. And as far as they go, that's the only thing they are concerned about.Jonnycraig wrote:Autosport saying today that it needs the other teams to agree for the 2014 cars to be run. Also say that McLaren are not involved.turbof1 wrote:Guys, it was too late by Christmas to produce the 2015 car, so it's definitely too late now. They'll be driving the 2014 car, which I believe will be a formality. The fia already indicated Marussia and Caterham would be allowed to drive those cars.
As said just above: "If its private investors, they need to secure access to a factory, hire a new workforce (many ex staff will have new jobs already), fund a years worth of Ferrari engines upfront, modify the 2014 cars to be legal, and presumably find two heavily funded drivers, all within 5 weeks. And then with an old car, likely fail to achieve 107%."
Hard to believe that much would come of this outside of a Super Aguri style disappearance midseason.
Apparently the investor is Justin King, formerly CEO of Sainsburys and father of GP2 driver Jordan.hollus wrote:It would make sense for a lot of people to be "the investor".
does make you wonder why on earth someone with a brain who is seriously planning to run ferrari powered formula 1 machinery in 2016 would hesitate to grab the lot with both hands and go racing already in 2015 creating experience and benchmarks -targets for his new team ....hollus wrote:It would make sense for a lot of people to be "the investor". If you were planning to enter F1 in 2016, buying Marussia now you get:
a) 30M in 2014 prize money. This will cancel most of the debt.
b) XXM in 2015 price money, all you have to do is be regularly within the 107%, and you are allowed to use engine killing modes and tire killing setups for that if needed, the speed in the race is irrelevant. 10th in the WCC is guaranteed.
c) A really good shot at 2016 price money. The 2016 traveling fund is in any case guaranteed? This would not be available to any team starting in 2016, as you have to be in the top 10 for 2 years out of 3.
To get this you need to run a 2014 car which has most pieces already made. You invest 0 in improvements and design of the 2015 car. Pay drivers welcome!
In preparation for 2016 you get:
Track data, telemetry, setup baselines, etc. for all tracks.
Experience on which of your 2015 drivers are good for 2016, you get to test 5 or 6 drivers if you are clever. If you had a rookie in mind, he gets a full year of experience.
Inside info on contractors, politics, power unit engineers, tire info, etc.
An existing team to mount a credible hiring campaign for 2016.
12 months of time for designing the 2016 car. The design team is not distracted by the 2015 campaign. They get full details of a decent 2014 car for inspiration.
12 months of time to get a testing team, wind tunnel team, etc, working together before the "real" 2016 debut.
Real testing of any pieces that might need testing. 19 race weekends, races included, of testing.
And a pre-aproved entry slot for 2016 that does not depend on the whims and blessing of an octogenarian.
Win-win-win-win-win, IMO.
His name has been banded about F1 for years, often as a replacement for Bernie at CVC. When asked by John Humphries on The Today programme he gave a fairly evasive answer (last year it was I think).Jonnycraig wrote:Apparently the investor is Justin King, formerly CEO of Sainsburys and father of GP2 driver Jordan.hollus wrote:It would make sense for a lot of people to be "the investor".
Justin King will turn the team around the same way he did 10+ years ago when he took the helm at Sainsburys, i know, i have worked through that time, met the man 3 times and know first hand what he is capable of.Facts Only wrote:His name has been banded about F1 for years, often as a replacement for Bernie at CVC. When asked by John Humphries on The Today programme he gave a fairly evasive answer (last year it was I think).Jonnycraig wrote:Apparently the investor is Justin King, formerly CEO of Sainsburys and father of GP2 driver Jordan.hollus wrote:It would make sense for a lot of people to be "the investor".
It would be nice to have someone competent like him in charge of F1 but maybe he would prefer a team, I bet hhe could bring a small amount of Sainsburys sponsorship but they are a bit to UK centric to be a title sponsor I think.
Where did you hear that he is the investor?
"Their plan is to revive a high-quality British racing ethic and brand-name."
i was also thinking about that. It would be nice to see the name back in the sportWaikeCU wrote:Brabham? That crowdfunding project?