dans79 wrote:That won't work with the top teams spreading costs out across multiple loosely affiliated companies.
how do you account for Mercedes HPP, McLaren Applied Technologies, and the equivalents at RedBull, Ferrari, & Williams? How do you account for the R&D work done by Petronas & Shell?
I'd say R&D work done by Petronas would not be included in cost control, it equalises itself anyway between manufacturers. You can force them to provide the same fuel for all customers along with equal engines (although they can't even be bothered with that currently) or stop development.
Off topic: "Cost cap wouldn't work" is a lie. It's like doping, just because you can't control it 100% you shouldn't forget about it altogether. Start with people, number and quality of people (therefore the costs) is one of the major differences between big and small teams. People that have to live and work physically somewhere and pay taxes. Staff is the best example because it includes the biggest liability in any cheating - human element, people can talk, spend money and move from team to team.
People that work together based on data from 20 races are needed to develop the car constantly during the season, not some divided hidden cost companies, that's not how you spend and win in F1. At least some core that connects it all is necessary, example: developing engine and chassis together is a big advantage. What else? Facilities that physically exist (wind tunnel etc.), car assembling with many outside suppliers (documents, taxes again), tyres. Some purely financial tricks? OK but limited and cheating is an expense itself. R&D? You can hide some of it within bigger companies but I think smaller team would take a chance with that
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Now you can add big penalties ("is it worth it to try"), marketing and brand costs of cheating, ability for controllers to close loopholes. These are big public companies with exchange of documents, FIAT etc., surely you can't hide new Ferrari facilities underground and falsify accounts so they disappear along with 100 people? Didn't they just spend millions on some new ones and costs are public? There's no will to lose competitive advantage, those teams are running the sport and that's the end of it. They blocked the common parts platform for independent teams while keeping B teams with all data exchange advantages.
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OT, current "engine crisis" only exists because:
- F1 is chaotically managed with no plans or back up plans, it's funny to hear Cowell saying they could supply more teams if they knew in May. Thinking 6 months ahead, in F1, is he joking? Ecclestone didn't know Red Bull would leave Renault in September, did he?
- They allowed engine suppliers to reject customers on top of other advantages,
- Red Bull needs engines and Ferrari doesn't want to be beaten by them, see above
- Mercedes is dominating, not "one team" is dominating
- no other supplier is interested in a circus where you lose money, entry barriers are huge and results predetermined but Toyota/VW group wouldn't even think about joining and Renault staying without "expensive" hybrids.
Renault's situation has nothing to do with strict rules but everything with marketing, Red Bull (forced), not getting new engines right and brand image because of all that. Stay or leave decision depends on money distribution deal, preferential treatment on Mercedes' level and below Ferrari, RB, McL, and not on engine development although I'm sure this topic will resurface.