dans79 wrote: ↑12 Oct 2022, 05:04
mendis wrote: ↑12 Oct 2022, 04:48
e30ernest wrote: ↑12 Oct 2022, 04:24
That would still be the team's issue though isn't it? They have him on employment so if they fail to utilize him (and his cost) it's their decision. However, this is done to ensure other teams don't get him right away so it is still a beneficial cost to the team.
I already mentioned it. Like in Fallow's case, the employee on gardening leave can be moved to a non F1 project to avoid the cost on F1 program.
I don't think the FIA is going to agree with that, that makes it far to east to manipulate the cost cap.
What was/is James Allison's salary and why isn't he part of the cost cap? How is this different to Newey?
From Dieter Rencken's article:
https://racingnews365.com/analysis-how- ... s-cost-cap
Mercedes founded its so-called Applied Sciences division which, for example, consulted to sponsor INEOS's America’s Cup entry Britannia - technical lead is the F1 team's former Technical Director James Allison - while Red Bull's equivalent trades as Advanced Technologies and recently engineered the RB17 hypercar.
..
These additional controls forced Mercedes to expand support departments such as Finance and HR, resulting in a reported headcount 10 percent growth from 157 to 173 – but, crucially, being non-racing activities, such costs are excluded from the cost cap. The net effect is overall headcounts fell from 1063 to 1004, or five per cent - plus Mercedes gained its Applied Sciences division as a bonus – despite the growth in non-racing headcount.
...
You then have a quote by Allison in 2022, seemingly very much involved:
“A race is over 50+ laps and having a car that’s competitive on all of those gives you opportunities and we’ve typically been able to move back forward through the race into a strong position. That said, we’d obviously prefer to be more competitive in qualifying,” Allison said in Mercedes’ post-France debrief.
“Some tracks like Budapest will cause us issues and we need to make sure we are really there or thereabouts to make sure we don’t have a number of other teams between ourselves and Ferrari and Red Bull.
“In terms of the upgrades themselves, yes, they are incremental steps, they are small steps that were added to the car, but the important point is we have plans to introduce far, far more across the races that follow.
“We won’t be able in one go just to catch up and be with Ferrari and Red Bull. But hopefully, as you have seen across the season so far, we are incrementally closing that gap down and we have more to come.”
In a separate interview in April 2021:
“I didn’t imagine that there would be a space for me in the team, having relinquished this brilliant job. Happily, Toto saw it a little differently. And between us we worked on the manner in which I could contribute to the team.”