Edax wrote:Just a wild idea.
What if a rule was enstated that at some point at the end of the season all teams were forced to disclose their IP to each other? That would be in a form of a technical drawings package, windtunnel data, CFD data, performance data etc.
This would not remove the incentive for the top tier teams to innovate, since it still would give a whole season advantage. For the lower ranked teams it would cut down on development costs and increase their competitiveness. At worst they could copy last year's winning car.
Even for the top teams it would not be all bad, since they can use the data of their competitors to speed up their own development.
What do you think?
I doubt that; in an interview with Pat Symonds it was reported that the operative-side only, getting to races, doing races and moving from races, costs around 40 million a year. Anything you have above that can go to developing the car. Yes, turning it (more) into a spec series will also decrease such costs since it simplifies the work. But it will not be divided by 4.GitanesBlondes wrote:If one were truly serious about cutting costs, you would have to eliminate front wings, rear wings, diffusers, mandate the floor is flat from front to back, and cannot extend out from the body. That takes a whole number of areas out of play that eat up a significant chunk of budgets.
The other option is to copy IndyCar and have a spec chassis designed that allows for no additions/alterations. What you see in Melbourne is exactly what you see in Abu Dhabi. You then in turn lose what little remains of F1's uniqueness, but if cutting costs is the only goal, then spec chassis is where it starts, followed by a low cost engine that is pretty much of a spec design. You'll be able to field a team for $10 million.
Transportation isn't going to add $40-$50 million to a budget.turbof1 wrote:I doubt that; in an interview with Pat Symonds it was reported that the operative-side only, getting to races, doing races and moving from races, costs around 40 million a year. Anything you have above that can go to developing the car. Yes, turning it (more) into a spec series will also decrease such costs since it simplifies the work. But it will not be divided by 4.GitanesBlondes wrote:If one were truly serious about cutting costs, you would have to eliminate front wings, rear wings, diffusers, mandate the floor is flat from front to back, and cannot extend out from the body. That takes a whole number of areas out of play that eat up a significant chunk of budgets.
The other option is to copy IndyCar and have a spec chassis designed that allows for no additions/alterations. What you see in Melbourne is exactly what you see in Abu Dhabi. You then in turn lose what little remains of F1's uniqueness, but if cutting costs is the only goal, then spec chassis is where it starts, followed by a low cost engine that is pretty much of a spec design. You'll be able to field a team for $10 million.
Indycar is much more efficient since it largely stays within the US, decreasing transportation cost and etc by a huge chunk. Imagine F1 staying in europe; I think that'll shave off quite a lot.
The engine figures are incorrect as they mention $130 million for F1. Not sure where they got the number from.TOTAL BUDGET
Top F1 team: $470 million; Top IndyCar team: $15 million
This includes the following key areas of spending:
THE CAR
Top F1 team: $125 million; Top IndyCar team: $3 million
The largest single cost for most F1 teams is the design, development and construction of a bespoke chassis. F1 teams must construct their own chassis and although the manufacturing costs of an F1 car are a relatively small $15 million per year, top teams can spend well over $100 million on research and development.
All IndyCar teams must buy their chassis from series provider Dallara. The price is $345,000 per chassis, but the purchase of aerodynamic packages designed for different circuits can add another $150,000-$200,000. A team typically gets through three chassis per driver each year.
Currently we are locked into the Seventh Concorde Agreement. Except if all teams agree, no changes will be made until it expires. That'd be in 2020.Aesto wrote:Quite frankly, cutting costs in a significant manner is simply impossible. The reason? Any solution needs to be viable both financially and politically. This thread contains a lot of ideas in line with the former, but none with the latter. The top teams hold all the power in Formula 1, and reducing spending is just not in their interest. Sauber or Force India are guaranteed to never be able to bother Red Bull or Mercedes as long as they can barely afford to pay the bills, never mind develop the car. So why would the frontrunners do anything to change that?
There will always be another billionaire-petrolhead with an inflated ego and the belief that he will succeed where everyone has failed. And then he will fail. And his willing replacement will already be waiting in the wings.turbof1 wrote:The most realistic path F1 will walk is except if Sauber, Lotus and Force India find more sources, atleast 1 of them and likely more will fold before 2020. Chances are that Haas also headed to the exit before that time. I really don't see new teams entering F1 either.
The issue is that the status-quo already is broken. Too much of F1's income has shifted to the big 5, and with increased costs we've arrived at the breaking point of the lesser teams. The big problem is that everything is locked behind contractual paperwork until 2020.Aesto wrote:There will always be another billionaire-petrolhead with an inflated ego and the belief that he will succeed where everyone has failed. And then he will fail. And his willing replacement will already be waiting in the wings.turbof1 wrote:The most realistic path F1 will walk is except if Sauber, Lotus and Force India find more sources, atleast 1 of them and likely more will fold before 2020. Chances are that Haas also headed to the exit before that time. I really don't see new teams entering F1 either.
People always expect an existing system - be it a financial, political or social one - to break down under perceived pressures. But the status quo has a way of perpetuating itself. Nothing ever really changes - at least not much.