pgj wrote:
Anyway, Max now seems to be hell bent on pushing as many manufacturers out of team ownership as possible. My take on things is that these engines are designed to carry as many teams as possible back into F1 as independently owned teams. If there was not a focus on independent teams, the FIA would not be talking about tendering for a 'stock' F1 engine for independents. That fact alone says a great deal about his thought processes. I would not be surprised to see Renault get the contract with Flav taking his team onwards in F1 as an independent.
I totally agree with you, this is about political power within the sport as much as saving money. Whilst the barriers to entry to the sport remain high –
To be competitive you will need a couple of wind tunnels operating 24/7 the odd supercomputer, 300-400 staff, and a powerful and reliable power-plant. In practical terms about 350 million startup, and 200-300 million a year thereafter, and a slice of good luck.
Only big companies can afford this kind of cash, and whilst that is not healthy for the sport in the long term, it gives the companies political clout with Max and Bernie. With no new entrants to F1, the existing teams can threaten to break away and demand more money from TV revenues. Max and Bernie can’t do without them at present otherwise F1 would collapse, so under the cost cutting agenda they can weaken their position by lowering the barriers to entry to the sport.
If Toyota pulls out for example, then a new team can replace them with a cheap standard engine/gearbox/ker package that can be bolted onto a chassis with the standard suspension and aero to go along with it. They will effectively be in a competitive situation straight away with little capital expenditure.
Whether this would still be F1 I don’t know, and whether it would still be exciting, again remains a mystery.
I also think that Cosworth would be the favourite to win the contract to provide standard engine IMO.