El Scorchio wrote: ↑19 Apr 2021, 15:44
DChemTech wrote: ↑19 Apr 2021, 15:00
El Scorchio wrote: ↑19 Apr 2021, 14:35
So essentially if a Haas, for example, wipes out Verstappen and completely wrecks his chassis through no fault of his own, then Red Bull are heavily financially penalised. That seems very unfair.
I'm sure Wolff is just making a bit of a meal of it to prove a point about the budget cap, and the actual impact will be negligible, but this does seem a bit ill thought out as a rule.
Ideally you would want that teams can always make new parts, provided they are identical to the previous iteration, without the cap. But yeah, the world is not ideal in that sense. I don't really see an easy way out.
Me either- it's very complex. I agree though- some sort of amnesty/zero count on cost of identical replacement parts would seem on the face of it a sensible way.
The other way that comes to mind is to just force-freeze development once the team hits the cost gap and from that moment allow identical copies only. That means theoretically they can spend all budget pre-season to maximize their development budget, and rely only on 'above-budget' repairs, but then they cannot change anything. Or, they can opt to stop a few million short of the budget in development, and still improve throughout the season until the cap is hit. That may allow for some interesting dynamics...
And it also means teams will need to have a quite clear view on how frequently they expect their driver to trash it, if they want to keep developing.