stephenwh wrote:
Completely - totally - 100% disagree. The FIA wanted a 4 cylinder engine, and Ferrari threatened to quit over it, so the formula we have now is a collaboration between the teams and the FIA. It was a comprise - not a mandate from the FIA - so using your logic everyone in the FIA *and* Ferrari are idiots
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The restricted development of engines, is left over from the era of unlimited spending to increase RPM and have special qualifying engines...the spending was out of control, that is why the homologation process is in place...
Spending was out of control, and continues to remain out of control due to aerodynamics. The engines being a huge cost problem was more BS peddled so F1 didn't have to actually address the entire sport's addiction to cheap parlor tricks with aerodynamics....and also why they have yet to revisit the ill-advised flat-bottom rule of 1983.
Did you know that Mario Illien said once that for the cost of engines in the frozen V8 spec, he could build 100 V10's for the same cost in the year 2000? True story, one of the basic principles in economics is that the more you produce of something, the less it costs over time due to the increased negotiating power of buying supplies in bulk. Sort of like why when things are scarce, they tend to cost far more than those that can be found in abundance. So now we are down to 5 engines per year per car? My, what do you think costs will be in that situation, more, less, or equal to the V8 era?
As I have already mentioned, with regards to engines, the 3.5L formula was the greatest formula the sport ever had because it saw incredible diversity that we've never seen since. Auto manufacturers all have different aims, and to force them all to make the same exact engine is an exercise in stupidity.
Even with the 5 year engine freeze, did spending decrease? Of course not because of how much it costs to one keep those large staffs employed, and two because of how much it costs to refine aerodynamics.
Mosley wanted the 4 cylinder engine, and anything he wanted essentially was a mandate from the FIA. Sure a compromise was reached with 6 cylinders, but it just showed how spineless Todt really is. Either way Ferrari made two huge mistakes in not vetoing the engines outright, and not vetoing the in-season testing ban.