You conveniently left out the "under the cost cap" bit! As asked, I wonder if the monies come out of the McLaren/Aston/Williams budgets for the Engine guys in full or is it some sort of split. Having engines in more cars [if it`s the former] is/will surely be beneficial when the cost cap hits...saviour stivala wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 13:17''How does it work... Must be an awkward one'' It has been part of the customer engine supply from well before the advent of the present power unit. I remember an engine supplier personal assigned to one team ordered not to fire-up a particular customer team engine/s because of unpaid instalments to the engine supplier before practice started at Silverstone. Also remember mercedes engine raced by mclaren having to be returned to supplier after each race and being delivered back at each race before practice.
Those guys come with the engine supply, ie. part of the service (different thing: so, just like with increasing amount of our stuff, we only 'own' it as long as we pay!) McLaren pays for.Mattchu wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 16:02You conveniently left out the "under the cost cap" bit! As asked, I wonder if the monies come out of the McLaren/Aston/Williams budgets for the Engine guys in full or is it some sort of split. Having engines in more cars [if it`s the former] is/will surely be beneficial when the cost cap hits...saviour stivala wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 13:17''How does it work... Must be an awkward one'' It has been part of the customer engine supply from well before the advent of the present power unit. I remember an engine supplier personal assigned to one team ordered not to fire-up a particular customer team engine/s because of unpaid instalments to the engine supplier before practice started at Silverstone. Also remember mercedes engine raced by mclaren having to be returned to supplier after each race and being delivered back at each race before practice.
So you are saying that the charge of X million a year for engines, includes the engines, the crew to run the engines while in the car, and the tech's back in HPP who produce, assemble, recondition and service the engine for the duration of the contract? I also have to assume it includes the training and retraining plus transport and accommodation then?bosyber wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 16:12Those guys come with the engine supply, ie. part of the service (different thing: so, just like with increasing amount of our stuff, we only 'own' it as long as we pay!) McLaren pays for.Mattchu wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 16:02You conveniently left out the "under the cost cap" bit! As asked, I wonder if the monies come out of the McLaren/Aston/Williams budgets for the Engine guys in full or is it some sort of split. Having engines in more cars [if it`s the former] is/will surely be beneficial when the cost cap hits...saviour stivala wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 13:17''How does it work... Must be an awkward one'' It has been part of the customer engine supply from well before the advent of the present power unit. I remember an engine supplier personal assigned to one team ordered not to fire-up a particular customer team engine/s because of unpaid instalments to the engine supplier before practice started at Silverstone. Also remember mercedes engine raced by mclaren having to be returned to supplier after each race and being delivered back at each race before practice.
Now, PU's have a maximum cost that the suppliers can ask, but those suppliers are not held to cost cap, it's only the competitors, ie. the teams that pay FIA entry fee, that are under a cost cap. That's why the FIA separately decided on that PU freeze from 2022 onward, to cut costs of further PU development (as they too feel the diminishing returns, and 2020's economic repercussions etc.).
i doubt it. more of the half of them has the mercedes logo on the right shoulder. thats too many.Thunder wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 13:31The Mercedes Engineers are the ones with the Meredes Logo on their Outfits. Right shoulder above the Dell Logo.Mudflap wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 13:27HPP engineers working at McL now appear to be wearing customer team wear.
5th guy left to right is Lewis's ex PU engineer who was replaced by Magda. I think he's now the HPP engineer in charge of McL PUs.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EuXsF0qXUAM ... name=large
I think Thunder is right, the image is from a McL tweet welcoming Merc engineers so it makes sense for most of them to be HPP employees.velizare wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 20:38i doubt it. more of the half of them has the mercedes logo on the right shoulder. thats too many.Thunder wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 13:31The Mercedes Engineers are the ones with the Meredes Logo on their Outfits. Right shoulder above the Dell Logo.Mudflap wrote: ↑23 Feb 2021, 13:27HPP engineers working at McL now appear to be wearing customer team wear.
5th guy left to right is Lewis's ex PU engineer who was replaced by Magda. I think he's now the HPP engineer in charge of McL PUs.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EuXsF0qXUAM ... name=large
i take what you and Thunder are both saying, just wondering about the high number of people to be delegated from the engine supplier side. are they all field engineers, who traveling with the twam and supporting them from the trackside on the weekends, or also the personel included who lends remote support for i stance with monitoring?
If you take into account how many People are involved in even firing these PU's up i don't think thats too many Engineers. Mind you they have 2 Cars to monitor, set up and potentially troubleshoot.velizare wrote: ↑24 Feb 2021, 07:55i take what you and Thunder are both saying, just wondering about the high number of people to be delegated from the engine supplier side. are they all field engineers, who traveling with the twam and supporting them from the trackside on the weekends, or also the personel included who lends remote support for i stance with monitoring?
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!