donskar wrote:... the overall cost of F1 will go down. The issue (in my mind)is value for money. What will the new "cheap" F1 look like to spectators?
Richards on cost saving and ethos in F1:
David Richards wrote:The initial signs are very attractive and represent the basis for a real revolution in the sport. They hold the promise to return Formula One to its fundamental ethos, where success comes to those with the most ingenious engineering and best organisation, not simply those with the biggest budget.
Lowe seems to support this in his Autosport interview by aiming for efficiency in engineering:
Paddy Lowe wrote:Although it may not appear things have changed, they have, and it will get tougher over the next 12 months. In some ways it is good that some people haven't noticed the change, because we still need to put on a show and it's not good for that if there is suddenly a perception that we've turned into dinosaurs technologically. I would hope we can still continue by being more efficient, and we're finding greater efficiency all the time. Things are changing behind the scenes, and people not being able to spot it is probably a good thing.
This would be in line with predictions that budget or resource cuts will not fundamentally change F1 as the pinnacle of motor racing if they are done in the right way. I tend to support Richards' position that technical superiority on equal or similar resources has greater value and represents more closely the ethos of the golden days of F1.