FoxHound wrote:Cmon....370 million dollars?
How about, as I suspect, that Red Bull have their own R&D expense as listed. And the rest is made up of supplier costs, who have had RB R&D costs palmed off onto them as creative accounting?
Not suggesting subterfuge in any way here, I just find it implausible for an F1 team known for it's high end aero etc to spend 100 million on R&D, with 370million mostly unaccounted for.
Noooo!!!SR71 wrote:Let's assume they spend 370 million on Aero.
http://espn.go.com/racing/nascar/icons/ ... id=3460865For all you gamers and virtual racers out there your ultimate fantasy world just might be a Sprint Cup race shop with all of the gizmos and gadgets the teams now have available to them. They can literally run an entire race on the many different machines in their shops to test engines, transmissions, rear gears, shocks, chassis geometry and just about everything else on their race cars.
Curious, why doesn't aero development get counted in the R&D budget? Seems to me aero is the kinda R&D a team like RB actually would do?bhall II wrote:First, let's get the numbers on the same page, because it seems we might be drawing from several sources here.
According to The Independent, which is the source for both the Mercedes and Red Bull figures I referenced earlier, RBR's total budget for 2014 was £196m. Of that, £83m was spent on R&D. So, we're not talking about 370 million (whatevers) left over; it's more like £113. When you factor salaries (of which Vettel and Newey accounted for £21 million), materials, infrastructure (buildings and upkeep), promotion, etc, that figure doesn't seem entirely unreasonable...by F1's absurd standards.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOWz5AW2k-I
Also, the $40 million figure I quoted for the "virtual test track" is just the number I recall being associated with it. I have no idea if it's accurate or not. I'd love to know more (about all of it); I just can't find anything that'll stick to ya ribs.
Ok, so I'm Red Bull, I have 330m to spend.FoxHound wrote:Thanks for the info on that Ben, I've done a bit of reading on the costs...and like yourself I'm not getting very far.
For comparative purposes, AVL supply NASCAR teams with similar technologies...since 2008.
http://espn.go.com/racing/nascar/icons/ ... id=3460865For all you gamers and virtual racers out there your ultimate fantasy world just might be a Sprint Cup race shop with all of the gizmos and gadgets the teams now have available to them. They can literally run an entire race on the many different machines in their shops to test engines, transmissions, rear gears, shocks, chassis geometry and just about everything else on their race cars.
I found their catalogue, and it unsurprisingly doesn't list costs.
http://tuvpr.com/pdf/ITS%20Product%20Ca ... 202013.pdf
But High end NASCAR teams have an annual budget of $20/25 million.
http://jacksonville.com/sports/racing/2 ... staggering
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/auto-raci ... r-cost.htm
Perhaps an F1 AVL rig would cost as much as $40m, but considering that there is allegedly 370m left over each season after Aero expenditure, you could buy a new AVL rig each season and still have $330m to spend.
It is.SR71 wrote:Curious, why doesn't aero development get counted in the R&D budget? Seems to me aero is the kinda R&D a team like RB actually would do?
Also, how much of Red Bull Technologies budget is devoted to aero development and simulation?
Ok that makes sense. Thanks.bhall II wrote:It is.SR71 wrote:Curious, why doesn't aero development get counted in the R&D budget? Seems to me aero is the kinda R&D a team like RB actually would do?
Also, how much of Red Bull Technologies budget is devoted to aero development and simulation?
Circa 2012, Red Bull considered Red Bull Technology to be a "supplier" in order to skirt the Resource Restriction Agreement. Or so goes my theory for the designation. It's a moot point now that the RRA has been abandoned, and the FIA has instituted its latest rounds of aero restrictions (max tunnel hours/runs per week, only one tunnel per calendar year, etc).
In any case, a Companies House report from Red Bull Technology Ltd is among the filings posted somewhere around here.
Next year we'll have the token system scraped. There'll be a nice arms race on the engine side, let's see what comes out of it.alc59 wrote:A fascinating topic. Without beng very close to the technology, it did occur to me that Aero convergence will generally be faster than PU, because you cannot hide the modifications. As soon as a double diffuser or whatever appears and gives impressive results, everyone spots it and takes it to their R&D teams and says we must have one. PU (includng all the hybrid stuff) is hidden. It would appear that convergence in the combustion chamber technology is taking longer, possibly just for this reason.