FoxHound wrote:We've sorta, maybe kinda in a roundabout way, discussed this previously, Ben.bhall II wrote:I think the above is the correct answer.
There were no cost controls in 2006, and over half the teams were works outfits of major automakers.rscsr wrote:This might be true for a small team like Manor. But it can't be true for a team like RBR. The engines for a customer cost about 20Mio or so and RBR (and other top teams) have a way higher budget than 40Mio per year.
The point being: "pound for pound," engine costs dwarf aero costs.
I still don't see how PU's are "pound for pound" more expensive than aero costs. My comparison here is illustrative, but pick the bones if you wish.
Red Bull have a 400+ million dollar budget, and pay 22Million for their engines. 5% of their total budget.
Williams have a roughly 190 Million budget and pay 21 Million for their engines. 11% of their total budget.
Ferrari Mercedes and Renault have costs configured into their mothership budgets, as well as earning money through sales.
McLaren Have a 460 million budget and pay nothing for engines. 0% of their total.
On the other end of the spectrum you get the likes of Force India and Torro Rosso with a budget of roughly 140 million apiece, paying 21 million for their engines, which is about 15% of their total budget.
I have no info on Haas, but then they didn't have to design their 2016 car....
Sauber and Manor are the 2 teams which you plausibly say that PU costs are maybe on a par with aero costs.
100 and 85 million budgets respectively means 20% of Sauber cash goes on engines, and about 24% of Manor's.
http://www.crash.net/f1/news/221835/1/f ... -most.html
To put all of this into perspective, Adrian Newey alone earns 10 million dollars a year.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/motors ... ation.html
His able lieutenant, Peter Prodromou was on roughly 5 Million a year until McLaren poached him for 9 million.
http://www.thepodiummagazine.com/christ ... -interview
That's 15 million dollars on 2 guys, plus you need a department of 100 plus personnel, CFD costs, windtunnel costs, model makers, materials...All high end stuff that costs a bundle of cash.
Au contraire, in most cases in the pitlane, aero costs dwarf engines costs, and by a large margin.
My question and curiosity isn't around what a customer pays for an engine.
It's also not about the fact any team could spend a billion if they wanted to.
The question is if we froze engines and a team was 3 seconds behind, would making that 3 seconds up through aero development cost most than a PU manufacture needing to make up 3 seconds with power and frozen aero.
I hope that makes sense.
Also I believe Mercedes PU team has a few hundred more personal than RB's aero.