Now all we need is for Rossi to confirm.NathanOlder wrote:I hope its Wehrlien and Rossi. [-o<
Now all we need is for Rossi to confirm.NathanOlder wrote:I hope its Wehrlien and Rossi. [-o<
Please God no. Rossi was immediately faster when he jumped into a car Stevens had been driving all year. Anyone but Stevens.hemichromis wrote:No one keen on Will Stevens for the second seat?
I'm with you! I just had to ask the questionf1316 wrote:Please God no. Rossi was immediately faster when he jumped into a car Stevens had been driving all year. Anyone but Stevens.hemichromis wrote:No one keen on Will Stevens for the second seat?
From F1fanaticWehrlein has 16 FIA F1 superlicence points. That leaves him short of the 40 required to qualify a licence, however the FIA has relaxed its rules allowing drivers who previously obtained a superlicence to hold one this year. In 2014 Wehrlein covered over 500km in a 2012-specification Mercedes F1 car, which was enough to earn a superlicence at the time.
Would be great - but where does all the money come from?BanMeToo wrote:As you all can see on Autosport right now, Manor will get some use out of the Merc windtunnel as part of Wehrlien deal. Things are all shaping up for them a little bit, will be great if they can challenge the second-last team this year.
Of course they get FOM's money for being 10th overall.adrianjordan wrote:For starters they now earn a significant chunk of FIA income (compared to before) thanks to their points in 2014 so any subsequent investment will go further...
Xray, in 2014 they did not receive column 1 or 2 price money because they did not got to 10th place in the 2 preceding years. They only got a measily 10 million dollar column 3 price money.XRayF1 wrote:Of course they get FOM's money for being 10th overall.adrianjordan wrote:For starters they now earn a significant chunk of FIA income (compared to before) thanks to their points in 2014 so any subsequent investment will go further...
However, this did not prevent them going bust in 2014.
please see http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/118955
So even if they got, say 10 million more due to more races etc., the rest of the spending is of my interest.
Overall, F1 budgets are confidential, but even the small teams have to budget with some 100-120 million annually.
So, while Manor/Marussia got money from 2014 in 2015 (see link, some 48 million), it did not prevent them end of 2014 to go insolvent. Meaning that even the prospect of getting FOM's money was not enough to prevent such.
Further down the line, how does this therefore equate to the current spending level?
In my head there is a gap of some 30-40 million minimum in Manor's budget ...