Websta wrote:I would suspect they would have a hard time securing funding, but I like that idea.
Yes, the financial requirements would be probably the hardest thing to meet, but I'm just interested if there's any regulatory wording closing off this avenue of development.
thisisatest wrote:i had a similar question before that nobody could answer, and it's appropriate for this title so:
you cant run a current car, or a car one year old, for testing, besides when it specifically allowed. you can run an older car. what's to keep a team from building a car that is "similar" to a current or future f1 car but technically illegal? it would not qualify as a current car, could they do whatever they want? it could be 7/8 scale so all dimensions are off, the possibilities are endless.
If it's not racing, is it a current car? What's the wording in the regulation? If a billionaire decided to fund a private track-day car that happened to perfectly fit into 2014 regulations, would it be a 'current f1 car'?