But for naming I hope they break free of all other teams and bring some Italian swing into F1. So please Alfa... no ARR01 or AR19 but please please.... just like a good Alfa... a womans name,
Name her Sofia
But Dallara produce the Chassis for Haas. That breaks that supposed rule surely ?Jolle wrote: ↑01 Feb 2019, 23:49Oh but the rule is that you have to race your own chassis. So it hasn't got to have the name, but you must be the manufacturer. This was the case with FI last year. The team had to be named FI because the manufacturer was FI, not Racing Point. That the car was named VJM didn't matter.NathanOlder wrote: ↑01 Feb 2019, 23:38I know they have always been named like that. I was just pointing out the Chassis name doesn't have to contain the team name.
This year the team will be called Alfa Romeo, so a little plaque in the car must read "manufactured by Alfa Romeo"
Teams dont have to manufacture a single component of the car, at all. For decades over half the grid had other companies manufacture chassis and other large components for them, all the team is responsible for is design and engineering.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Feb 2019, 09:44But Dallara produce the Chassis for Haas. That breaks that supposed rule surely ?Jolle wrote: ↑01 Feb 2019, 23:49Oh but the rule is that you have to race your own chassis. So it hasn't got to have the name, but you must be the manufacturer. This was the case with FI last year. The team had to be named FI because the manufacturer was FI, not Racing Point. That the car was named VJM didn't matter.NathanOlder wrote: ↑01 Feb 2019, 23:38
I know they have always been named like that. I was just pointing out the Chassis name doesn't have to contain the team name.
This year the team will be called Alfa Romeo, so a little plaque in the car must read "manufactured by Alfa Romeo"
The team name has to include the chassis name. So the chassis designation can't be Sauber which is kind of sad - even BMW kept the Sauber name (I guess Peter Sauber was still involved at that stage).PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑01 Feb 2019, 19:30Well the team is now Alfa Romeo racing.. But it is yet to be seen if the chassis name will remain a Sauber!
If the team name has to include the chassis name, the team names change every year as the chassis names change every year.jjn9128 wrote: ↑02 Feb 2019, 12:02The team name has to include the chassis name. So the chassis designation can't be Sauber which is kind of sad - even BMW kept the Sauber name (I guess Peter Sauber was still involved at that stage).PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑01 Feb 2019, 19:30Well the team is now Alfa Romeo racing.. But it is yet to be seen if the chassis name will remain a Sauber!
I think he meant it the other way round, so the chassis has to include the team name.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Feb 2019, 14:02If the team name has to include the chassis name, the team names change every year as the chassis names change every year.
Using Mercedes as an example the team name is the "Mercedes-AMG Petronas Motorsport" they use a Mercedes chassis so Mercedes has to appear in the full team name. It's the reason Racing Stroll Points had to keep Force India in their name - as the chassis was called "Force India".CONSTRUCTOR'S DETAILS OF ENTRY
National Competitor Licence
Issued By
Number
Team Name
(Which must include the name of the chassis)
It’s a bit of a gray area of course. Since Toro Rosso ran a Red Bull chassis in their first year, you have to at least own the design and I guess it has to bear your name, in which plant it was glued together doesn’t make a whole lot of difference. I have on the other hand no idea how Suzuki did it with the old Arrow’s chassis.NathanOlder wrote: ↑02 Feb 2019, 09:44But Dallara produce the Chassis for Haas. That breaks that supposed rule surely ?Jolle wrote: ↑01 Feb 2019, 23:49Oh but the rule is that you have to race your own chassis. So it hasn't got to have the name, but you must be the manufacturer. This was the case with FI last year. The team had to be named FI because the manufacturer was FI, not Racing Point. That the car was named VJM didn't matter.NathanOlder wrote: ↑01 Feb 2019, 23:38
I know they have always been named like that. I was just pointing out the Chassis name doesn't have to contain the team name.
This year the team will be called Alfa Romeo, so a little plaque in the car must read "manufactured by Alfa Romeo"