I did not imply anything on engine developmentalexx_88 wrote:Even if it were true, that money is being used now. If they take half of that and redirect it to at least a 2-year engine development program, it's certain other areas of the operation will suffer as they'll become under-funded.
as far as i know the mounting points are the same for every engine. so they wont have to change that much at all i sassumeWilliamsF1 wrote:I did not imply anything on engine developmentalexx_88 wrote:Even if it were true, that money is being used now. If they take half of that and redirect it to at least a 2-year engine development program, it's certain other areas of the operation will suffer as they'll become under-funded.
Just stated that RBR will not have any problem changing the car to fit any engine (Honda, Merc or Ferrari) in short notice considering the vast resources at its disposal.
I think it will be utter madness for a manufacturer to enter the sport with the engine regulations as they are. Unless Honda can come out competitive next year and win races, none of them will be in a hurry to invest millions for poor press. Add to that you have the likes of Mercedes, Ferrari and Renault with a couple of years head start, Honda, a year ahead. Those multi million dollar companies aren't daft. If they haven't cracked this formula in a couple of years, a Toyota isn't suddenly going to do it either.MadMatt wrote:Now that Toyota has officially said they will enter WRC, I doubt VERY MUCH they will go to F1 on top of LeMans and other series they are in.
That statement couldn't be further from the truth, did you see the image of the Toro Rosso when the engine cover flew off? Everything has to be re-worked, cooling, intakes, routing of exhaust, heat shielding, even the size or the intakes if they have different cooling requirements. That's if they can make everything fit under the existing lines, they may have to go back to the aerodynamic drawing board if they can't fit it all under there.skoop wrote:as far as i know the mounting points are the same for every engine. so they wont have to change that much at all i sassumeWilliamsF1 wrote:I did not imply anything on engine developmentalexx_88 wrote:Even if it were true, that money is being used now. If they take half of that and redirect it to at least a 2-year engine development program, it's certain other areas of the operation will suffer as they'll become under-funded.
Just stated that RBR will not have any problem changing the car to fit any engine (Honda, Merc or Ferrari) in short notice considering the vast resources at its disposal.
And by a lot of accounts their LMP1 budget is quite a bit less than Audi and Porsche.MadMatt wrote:Now that Toyota has officially said they will enter WRC, I doubt VERY MUCH they will go to F1 on top of LeMans and other series they are in.
The token system has been in the rules from the very beginning.TAG wrote:As far as I'm aware there's only one version of an engine and that's the engine that's homologated at the beginning of the year 2016. This year was an anomaly because of the development loophole.
From my point of view, F1 could very well do with an ALO vs HAM at Mercedes-Benz and a VET vs RIC at Ferrari. If those two cars are equally matched, I think I would basically spend all my time after qualifying on Saturday in deep thoughts till the lights went out on Sunday. Well, one can dream.KeiKo403 wrote:I've too been thinking about an escape clause in Alonso's contract, but more so if Vettel clinches 2nd in the WDC this season over Rosberg and Rosberg is getting beaten again next season could we see Merc drop Rosberg if Alonso is about to break out of his contract? I guess that's for Silly Season 2017 though.
The token system yes, the concept of utilizing those tokens throughout the year, no. Next year we're supposed to return to the engine being homologated in Feb or March just as it was agreed upon originally. Ironically it was Ferrari and Red Bull pushing for in year development and at least thorough Monza they've both spent the least amount of tokens. Go figure.Cold Fussion wrote:And by a lot of accounts their LMP1 budget is quite a bit less than Audi and Porsche.MadMatt wrote:Now that Toyota has officially said they will enter WRC, I doubt VERY MUCH they will go to F1 on top of LeMans and other series they are in.
The token system has been in the rules from the very beginning.TAG wrote:As far as I'm aware there's only one version of an engine and that's the engine that's homologated at the beginning of the year 2016. This year was an anomaly because of the development loophole.
Thanks for the link. That's very interesting. Personally I take that with a grain of salt though. Several conflicting numbers doing the rounds, personally I find Autosport more trustworthy but that's for everyone to decide for themselves. Kudos to you for backing up your claim when asked!WilliamsF1 wrote:http://www.foxsports.com.au/motor-sport ... 7478894343ME4ME wrote:Got a source on that? Seen a lot of numbers circulating about this over the last 3 years, but none that high.WilliamsF1 wrote:Red Bull Racing has a budget of $700 million ..
Edit: A Dieter Rencken article on Autosport dated 31 of august 2013 (so 2 years old) states £235,5M (about $360M) annual budget. This could have changed, and this source could be wrong, but nevertheless I think 700M is a bit exaggerated![]()
http://forums.autosport.com/topic/18952 ... -finances/