What blokes are you talking about? I though so far it's just a name and (perhaps) some money.sticky667 wrote:i think this is excellent news. we aren't seeing a "new" f1 team persay. this is a collection of highly skilled and highly experienced f1 blokes who happened to be backed by the Malaysian government.
raceman wrote:every "notable" figure in F1 says Cosworth engines will require more fuel than the current engine rivals, so they will be carrying more fuel - it will be interesting to see how Cosworth-powered cars will behave in terms of full-race fuel load; might be way back on the grid in qualifying![]()
sure, being 5s slower is dangerous. Should not be allowedESPImperium wrote:Return to 107% qualifying???
ESPImperium wrote:Return to 107% qualifying???
The thing is that Brawn and FI have sort of benefited from the drastic rule changes. Next year there will be some continuity, so all the current cars on the grid have an advantage over the new teams already. They only way I can see a new team breaking through in the next 3 years is via some radical design which no one else has seen (quite unlikely) or another set of drastic rule changes to level the playing field again.WhiteBlue wrote:I would like more teams. 20 cars is an artificial situation. F1 teams and drivers need to be exposed to competition from the lower ranks on a permanent basis. The new entrants will not be competitive out of the box but look at Brawn and Force India. In a close nit technical world the cars are more equal than ever and the races have been very good lately. 2009 will be seen as a vintage season soon.
No.vall wrote: sure, being 5s slower is dangerous. Should not be allowed
They still have funding from red bull for another year, they're contract expires at the start of 2011 or end of 2010 as they can no longer accept customer cars.bill shoe wrote:Yea, as a spectator I think more teams can only be good. The only downside to more teams is if you own a current team and are looking to sell.
I don't think there is any chance of 28 cars actually showing up on the grid next year, but I would rather technically allow 28 for now rather than have the FIA try to guess which applications will result in actual cars on the grid next year.
Have I missed it or has someone mentioned Toro Roso? A year ago that team was openly admitting they needed to find a buyer by the end of this season. Now it looks like 2010 will have more entered teams than funding for said teams, so the value of Toro Roso has surely plumeted to not much more than the value of their equipment. I know they have not been getting the latest and greatest from Red Bull, but their car is roughly similar to the best car on the grid and they are last in the constructor's championship.
I'm pro-Toro Roso (due to the Minardi roots if nothing else), but I just don't see them making it. Does anyone think they will be there for 2010? If so with what funding?