bauc wrote:
Finally some good news, I just want this thing to get sorted out so we can focus (hopefully) on good racing and close battle's at the race track in 2016 instead of politics in the sport.
I'm a little bit confused why this is a good result, surely to get additional engine manufactures into the sport and take away this whole "
Quitting" mantra that teams & engine manufactures are using. The engine manufacturers are only doing this because currently no one else can provide these PU to teams with the current regs. Honda have tried, possibly a year early, and have/will be playing the catch up game. Renault, as far as I am aware have not been using their tokens.
Now I was too young to know the politics of the sport in the 90's, so I am unsure if engine manufactures had fights, had the power to block rules etc over having V12, V10 & V8's in one season.(I do remember the racing)
For example in one season:
-Mercedes-Benz V10
-Renault V10
-Yamaha V10
-Ferrari V12
-Ford ECA V8
-Peugeot V10
-Mugen Honda V10
-Hart V10
-Ford HB (C/D/E/F) V8
-Ilmor V10
Now just looking at the 1994 championship finish, in regards to engines, Renault V10 finished first, followed by a Ford V8 & Ferrari V12. Not bad for different configured engines!!
I am am of the opinion that having alternatives to the current stringent engine rule-set/regs etc (i.e relatively closed market) is not necessarily a bad idea, apart from Mercedes. I am also sure that midfield teams - or in this case Redbull - that could have alternative options, due to budget, poor relationship, poor results or opportunities/partnerships (Honda-McLaren), would or at least could, take them if they were implemented into the sport in an adequate manner.
I'm not against the V6T's, nor the overall direction of these PU's, but I am against anti-competitiveness & this oligopolistic engine market F1 has found itself in.