Formula One's Engine Crisis

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turbof1
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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Why should Ferrari or any other supplier subsidise their goods?
Oh I have not -and I will not- made any comment if they should or shouldn't. I threw that in there since we were talking about PU costs.
And I don't quite see how advocating aero restrictions is valid when engines were frozen
Since you tried to dodge around the statement -yes, I noticed- I'll just be assuming you accept it, albeit reluctantly ;).

Goodnight.
#AeroFrodo

ferkan
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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I think only reason Merc voted for in season development is because Ferrari is already relatively close (with 4 tokens more to spend) and nobody would be surprised if they came up with pretty much equal PU in first test of next season with or without in season testing. So if one manufacturer is going to be on equal footing why not give other two a chance and earn some "points"? There is literally no drawback. Ferrari is going to be their main competitor next year and they are there without rule changes (Allison said it few days ago), so why not throw a bone to the other two?

We have seen their stance last year when Ferrari and RBR wanted in season development, Toto was furious and wouldn't budge. Merc wanted to give more tokens, but not more time knowing that Ferrari and Renault hardly can spend all 32 tokens by first test. It got to the point where "handshake deal" was made just for Merc to say no at meeting. Had Ferrari not found the loophole this season would be even bigger borefest. Also, this year they don't seem to mind RBR going out, and plans for 3 car next season already began in Toto's mind so yea, they care for themselves only like everyone else.
Last edited by ferkan on 20 Oct 2015, 01:30, edited 1 time in total.

ferkan
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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turbof1 wrote:
FoxHound wrote:
djos wrote:Not cheap, affordable (everything is relative in few).
You cannot have (32 tokens ie 50% of PU)development with these engines, and then expect affordable.

@Turbo...
And therein lies the rub, along with the fact that 1 supplier has helped 3 other suppliers, which directly assists a quit threat competitor unhappy with their own supplier, which inadvertently adds a cost burden to 50% of the grid.

Keeps unhappy competitor in sport but the inadvertent sacrificial lamb is costs to those that suffer most.
As long it suits Mercedes, it's not their problem. Own interests always come first, and their interests are primarily marketing for the brand. 1 supplier helped its own, and helping the 3 other is more down to unwanted coincidence then anything else.

For the record, a proposal to put a cost cap on engine prices a year was on the table. Ferrari did whiped that off the table.

And Foxhound, you are excagerating. 25 tokens would have been spend anyway, only at February instead of throughout the season. Resources would then have been allocated to developing next years tokens. They would be spending money no matter what. They made the PUs more expensive by 7 tokens, but only for the manufacturers with the customer teams having running contracts with fixed prices. It's not really a big deal. With or without restrictions, they are going to throw as much money on it as they possibly can. We know this; the same happened when they tried to restrict aero development. Correct, Foxhound? :wink:
I agree with you Turbo on this. Spending few dozen million more in season to get desired results is sure as hell better then spend few less just to make a deadline and look like amateur for entire year. How much did Renault and Honda lose on their "name" this year with engine blowing left and right and being 30-40kph down the straigths? How much would it cost them 2/3 years in a row? I bet much more then if they allocated a bit higher budget in season to get their engines competative.

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adrianjordan
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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Re costs: it was reported in James Allen's article that the engine manufacturers voted in favour of capping the costs of the PU's to something like 12million per season...which I believe is less than they cost at present...seems they're happy to swallow the development costs...
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dans79
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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adrianjordan wrote:Re costs: it was reported in James Allen's article that the engine manufacturers voted in favour of capping the costs of the PU's to something like 12million per season...which I believe is less than they cost at present...seems they're happy to swallow the development costs...
Maybe for just the motor, but few teams are paying for just a create motor.
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FoxHound
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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turbof1 wrote:
Why should Ferrari or any other supplier subsidise their goods?
Oh I have not -and I will not- made any comment if they should or shouldn't. I threw that in there since we were talking about PU costs.
And I don't quite see how advocating aero restrictions is valid when engines were frozen
Since you tried to dodge around the statement -yes, I noticed- I'll just be assuming you accept it, albeit reluctantly ;).

Goodnight.
PU costs are also affected by supply. Why should they be fixed?

And I haven't dodged your statement. The statement itself is contradictory to the point you are attempting to make.
So profuse apologies, I don't accept it. :oops:
JET set

Jonnycraig
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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Bernie wants V8s back for 2016 and is willing to let Mercedes sue him to get them reintroduced:
http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/moto ... 00696.html

Also says FOM will sue RB if they leave the sport.

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bauc
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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Jonnycraig wrote:Bernie wants V8s back for 2016 and is willing to let Mercedes sue him to get them reintroduced:
http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/moto ... 00696.html

Also says FOM will sue RB if they leave the sport.
Ay ay ay caramba,,,, :shock:

I guess the show must go on a?
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turbof1
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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Jonnycraig wrote:Bernie wants V8s back for 2016 and is willing to let Mercedes sue him to get them reintroduced:
http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/moto ... 00696.html

Also says FOM will sue RB if they leave the sport.
He's been too much around Poetin. It's impossible to get V8s reintroduced for next year - both regulatory and logistics wise.
Formula One chief executive Ecclestone told The Independent: “I don’t think we should get consent from the teams. I think we should just do it and say to them, ‘If you don’t like it you can go to arbitration’.
Not that I deem it anywhere necessary to go arbitration, but if they did Ecclestone would have nothing juristical in his defence. It'll furthermore harm his chances against the EU Commission.

Some high talk, nothing more.
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Phil
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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turbof1 wrote:He's been too much around Poetin. It's impossible to get V8s reintroduced for next year - both regulatory and logistics wise.
It's a power struggle. Bernie doesn't like does he has lost influence and power. Who gained? Mercedes, even a bit Ferrari, because they have the competitive engines. That means they can influence/dictate who they supply and therefore who has a good chance of winning/performing adequately and who doesn't. He knows a lot of the small teams are not happy with the situation but can't be vocal about it because they are dependent (financially too, if they are getting a better deal) on their suppliers. By threatening for cheap V8 to come back, he is probably rallying those forces together against both Mercedes and Ferrari. Renault is on the hinge and Honda doesn't have much influence yet in the state they are in.

High talk yes, but the reasons behind them are interesting to say the least. Bernie rarely does something without a clear goal in mind.
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turbof1
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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Phil wrote:
turbof1 wrote:He's been too much around Poetin. It's impossible to get V8s reintroduced for next year - both regulatory and logistics wise.
It's a power struggle. Bernie doesn't like does he has lost influence and power. Who gained? Mercedes, even a bit Ferrari, because they have the competitive engines. That means they can influence/dictate who they supply and therefore who has a good chance of winning/performing adequately and who doesn't. He knows a lot of the small teams are not happy with the situation but can't be vocal about it because they are dependent (financially too, if they are getting a better deal) on their suppliers. By threatening for cheap V8 to come back, he is probably rallying those forces together against both Mercedes and Ferrari. Renault is on the hinge and Honda doesn't have much influence yet in the state they are in.

High talk yes, but the reasons behind them are interesting to say the least. Bernie rarely does something without a clear goal in mind.
It's ironic since it was he who convinced the FIA of selling 2/3 of the regulatory power, with 1/3 going to the 6 teams.

I don't think he'll achieve anything with it. The current manufacturers do not seem to have any intention to go back to V8's. If he breaches the contracts, they can just walk out of the sport for free, leaving the sport with engines.

I'd like to see this in the bigger picture of the last couple of years: he's been very vocal about his disgust towards the current PU platform. This is just another of the public slamming campaign he's been waging against it. That's all he can do. His goal is clear, but not reachable.
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Jonnycraig
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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Perhaps a timely comment in this Amus article on Wehrlein claiming that Merc hope Lotus will fold as they will struggle to supply 50 engines for next season..
http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... 18076.html

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adrianjordan
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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Bernie really does need to go. I'm fairly certain that none of the teams would welcome having to redesign the entire rear end (and probably the front end as well due to altered aero) to accommodate a V8 engine. And we'd lose Mercedes and probably Renault and Honda too leaving only Ferrari of the current engine suppliers.

Could Ferrari supply the entire (reduced in all likelihood) grid with engines at this short notice? Of course not and Bernie knows this. Statements like this just make the sport look disorganised and don't do any favours to the public view of it outside of hard-core fans.
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FW17
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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I think V8 in regulations will be in addition to the V6T

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Phil
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Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

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adrianjordan wrote:And we'd lose Mercedes and probably Renault and Honda too leaving only Ferrari of the current engine suppliers.
Lose them? That's not the goal. The goal is to get them to concede power. The goal is to force those profiting at the moment to concede power. This is negotiating in the most basic sense; You threaten something you know no-one wants and you find a compromise somewhere in the middle.

Ironically, what Bernie wants is what we (as fans) want too; A closer competitive field. It makes it more exciting, which in turn is easier to sell and make more money (for him).
Not for nothing, Rosberg's Championship is the only thing that lends credibility to Hamilton's recent success. Otherwise, he'd just be the guy who's had the best car. — bhall II
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