No and the cost cap is going to be $5m less in 2023
They can however stockpile supplies!
I don't think they can to have "free" supplies as such. The rules about Unused inventory only applies to the "Current Car". If they stockpiled materials to build then they would be outside what they need to report and thus outside the cost cap. However as soon as they are used in 2023 they would be recognised as a material cost for the "Current Car" and past of that cost cap. You can argue there might be a small saving if the purchase price of raw materials increases, but storage costs money. And pregreg does have a shelf life.dans79 wrote: ↑16 Oct 2022, 16:19They can however stockpile supplies!
Thanks. I will re-read the inventory sections.littlebigcat wrote: ↑16 Oct 2022, 13:29No if you manufacture a 2023 part in 2022 its part of the cost cap in which year its first used. The R&D cost of this part is included in the year the R&D happened, this includes the staff cost. Only the manufacturing and material cost can be deferred to the next season.henry wrote: ↑16 Oct 2022, 13:01The budget cap is not related to the output, this years car or next, only the expenditure on cars in general during 21chrisc90 wrote: ↑16 Oct 2022, 12:34Is there a chance that the confusion could have come from staffing or parts development that were due to be for the next season/era of cars?
For example could RB have moved staff onto the 2023 car and development, or used budget to start making parts etc and the FIA is thinking they are for the 2021 season? Or a staff member working on the rb18 for 6 months, so 6 months is allocated to one car and 6 months to the other.
RB are using this fact to suggest that they spent more on the 21 car than their rivals by delaying spending on the 22 car. This spikes arguments that RB brought more updates than their rivals.
Given this is applicable to every other team, I do not think the FIA would have made any mistake here
I think it depends on what area Red Bull believe what they say and what the FIA have put down on paper as they want something to mean.
Exactly.
So, if as Marko says, it is about sick pay, does that mean that the other 9 teams underspent, and was this due to advice from FIA? this has many aspects here.
What proof do you have that the Rb18 had a head start. And the fact that you just want to call RedBull cheaters without even knowing what the amount or nature of the breach isn't even remotely contributing to the conversation.
I'm not deflecting anything, I'm stating a technical fact that at no point was the car deemed illegal.Tvetovnato wrote: ↑15 Oct 2022, 07:06Another deflection attempt. Overspending the budget cap can make your car faster without a single doubt. Even the kind of overspend that would be considered minor. Throwing in AD 21 wont help since that was another rule breach by FIA themselves to spice up the show.
What does Lewis car pace in Abu Dhabi has to do with RB breaching the cost cap? If RB didn’t overspend, they might have been even further back and not even on the same points as Lewis come Abu Dhabi, given their car would have slower without all of the updates they brought.
As long as the replacement does not earn more, if less you could exclude only the lower salary (?)
So if im right in putting that into practice.....You could have 25 employees off with long term covid (example) and you draft in 25 extra heads from another area of the business that is outside the cap. The person off sick still gets their pay (or they could even be put on Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) and you can bring in another worker with equally or marginally less talent, to cover for their role and the salary for that work is excluded under the cap, providing it does not go over the salary of the person off sick.RZS10 wrote: ↑16 Oct 2022, 19:25As long as the replacement does not earn more, if less you could exclude only the lower salary (?)
I'd say your interpretation is correct for all of them, U is essentially excluding paid paternity/maternity leave IF it would get paid to everyone within the group (team wide policy).