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Agreed. But with falling interest in F1, failed Stock Exchange floats, teams ready to collapse - with the blessing of the promoter and a sport in disarray amid fan backlash - you'd call that risk, wouldn't you?Moxie wrote:Shareholders. Why on earth would a publicly traded company dump that much money into developing an engine for bloody good fun. Shareholders demand profits abhor unnecessary risk.
I'm sorry. Nothing personal, but it's only you and a handful of others that still believe this. If it were really true, we'd have a very different grid.autogyro wrote:As long as the manufacturers see F1 as the peak of vehicle technology they will invest.
When this is no longer the way they see it, they will not.
Simple really.
Look at the flipside. What is the opportunity?Cam wrote:Agreed. But with falling interest in F1, failed Stock Exchange floats, teams ready to collapse - with the blessing of the promoter and a sport in disarray amid fan backlash - you'd call that risk, wouldn't you?Moxie wrote:Shareholders. Why on earth would a publicly traded company dump that much money into developing an engine for bloody good fun. Shareholders demand profits abhor unnecessary risk.
WEC and GT Production series.Edax wrote:So as a manufacturer where would you put your money?
And that is why there is the move to "road car relevancy". Without road car makers providing engines there is no F1. If Renault, Mercedes and Honda pull out, that would leave the entire grid buying engines from Ferrari. Is that what you want?Cam wrote:F1 has only 2 full factory manufacturer teams. All the rest are engine customers.
I agree, but I'd like,to be a little more specific. F1 has to play to the board members and the major shareholders of the manufacturers. Green is popular, so that is the lime of BS. The other option is for Formula one to use production based engines, bit I guess that would be sacrilegious.Just_a_fan wrote:And that is why there is the move to "road car relevancy". Without road car makers providing engines there is no F1. If Renault, Mercedes and Honda pull out, that would leave the entire grid buying engines from Ferrari. Is that what you want?Cam wrote:F1 has only 2 full factory manufacturer teams. All the rest are engine customers.
F1 has to play to the manufacturers because they are the only ones able to spend the money necessary to compete, or at least make engines anyway.
There will always be someone who can supply engines. But, what engines? The FIA stipulate that, so the FIA can change it too. They can write into the rules "off the shelf v8 or v6 turbo". Does it get more relevant than that? F1 uses the same engine I can buy today.Just_a_fan wrote:And that is why there is the move to "road car relevancy". Without road car makers providing engines there is no F1. If Renault, Mercedes and Honda pull out, that would leave the entire grid buying engines from Ferrari. Is that what you want?Cam wrote:F1 has only 2 full factory manufacturer teams. All the rest are engine customers.
F1 has to play to the manufacturers because they are the only ones able to spend the money necessary to compete, or at least make engines anyway.
Why not just have a limit on the amount of "fuel" that is allowed to be added to the car?Psoz wrote:Let's have a 3.5 liter formula (of any cylinder configuration) with provisions for boost regulated 1.6 liter turbocharged engines (possibly even allow reworked engines from the current formula). Let's either remove the minimum weight, or set it low enough that most if not all teams cannot reach it.