Didn't that bumped off on the currency ? We'll see; it's not yet confirmed actually.Facts Only wrote:How do you want to send me my £10 Turbo?
Didn't that bumped off on the currency ? We'll see; it's not yet confirmed actually.Facts Only wrote:How do you want to send me my £10 Turbo?
turbof1 wrote:I agree I am overly cynical on it. To answer your question however: dozens of millions of prize money, if Red Bull does not compete. Of course, it can also open a can of worms. If Renault is allowed to have in effect 2 seperate development paths, what would stop Ferrari from instance to relabel some of their PUs Alfa Romeo and use that as a separate development path? How about Mercedes involving Chrysler for the same move? Honda and Mugen?
No it wouldn't necessarily. Rather, one interpretation would allow Red Bull to keep receiving updates from Renault, but can't make their own updates. Also do remember that the current regulations allow for 1 year-old PU supply. Having updates is not a right. Atleast not for one year.FoxHound wrote:Legally speaking, if TJ13 was correct abiut the IP sale of the engine, Red Bull have a right to develop it.
It would be illegal to enforce a rule that stopped a competitor developing it's engine.
Once the IP was split 50/50, it fails to be a single entities engine. And there is no law against it.
Besides, I think Renault may want a piece of ilmor right now, given their "upgrade" proved worse than the old unit.
A spending war and basically going out of touch with reality. Do you want as presentator explain that for instance HAAS runs their very own PUs, but also not really because it is in some sort of degree a Ferrari PU, which Ferrari might use next year if it is a good one, while forcing HAAS to detune it in the present so they don't embarass Ferrari?FoxHound wrote:Why would this be an issue Turbo?
Manufacturers would be happy, FIA would be happy and Bernie would be over the moon. Red Bull would be on the grid for the next few years, and responsible for their own development programme which will not be allowed to run in parallel to Renault's as there would be an effective split.
And when you think about it, it gives independent teams the ability too, should manufacturers wish to sell IP to them for their own development programmes.
This could actually be a solution rather than a problem.
The important thing to remember here, I'm not proposing a constant symbiotic relationship which is what it looks like Haas and Ferrari seem to have.
Once the IP is transferred, the team developing the engine are on their own.
So it can happen with chassis and aero, but it's a massive issue with engines?turbof1 wrote: There will never be a split. Ferrari showed how easily they can go around development inhibiting rules by "laying off" employees and letting them all leave for HAAS, while those same employees stay at Ferrari in Maranello and use the excact same tools Ferrari uses. "Hey don't worry. We use the same hard drive to save both the HAAS development and the Ferrari development. But we SWEAR we aren't opening their files!"
I'm lamenting both, if you did not noticed . The comparison is not flawed btw. Both what Ferrari/HAAS do and potentionally with Renault/Red Bull can do, are examples of bending the rules in such a fashion you almost completely whipe out any regulations on development. It's up to the FIA to make sure these interpretations cannot be followed, because while I am for more development, it should be done in a controlled environment. Not within loopholes left open.FoxHound wrote:So it can happen with chassis and aero, but it's a massive issue with engines?turbof1 wrote: There will never be a split. Ferrari showed how easily they can go around development inhibiting rules by "laying off" employees and letting them all leave for HAAS, while those same employees stay at Ferrari in Maranello and use the excact same tools Ferrari uses. "Hey don't worry. We use the same hard drive to save both the HAAS development and the Ferrari development. But we SWEAR we aren't opening their files!"
Exactly. It leaves the sport wide open for mockery.ripper wrote:I really hope that FIA won't allow different development paths, otherwise we'll soon find Lancia, Alfa Romeo, Maserati, Abarth Mugen, Dacia, Renault Samsung Motors, AMG PUs... and maybe more.
Hell no, please
Yes there can be. Renault is not a charity fund, they will want something in return . And let's be fair: who is going to have the most benefit from the collaboration between HAAS and Ferrari? Ferrari of course. Besides that, it's an obvious case where rule bending will lead to a massive spending war. Both are perfect examples and can be compared in terms of impact. Both are very troubling to say the least. No better comparison can be made, that's a fact for you there .FoxHound wrote:Remember the reason I'm saying this is different, is that Ferrari directly benefit from Haas and vice versa.
Red Bull getting an engine and developing it themselves independently of Renault, with no transfer between the 2 is different.
There can be no comparison to the Haas situation.
You are neglecting the single most argument I'm making: it creates a spending war, where HAAS gains a little and Ferrari a lot. It's highly disproportional since Ferrari effectively doubles development input, where HAAS only enjoys half of that input. Either way, don't take my word for it. Ask Toto Wolff if this kind of loophole is further deepened out:In a symbiotic relationship both parties stand to gain their proportional share.
"This is the trigger of reorganising your structures to share ATR quota, to collaborate and educate personnel jointly and to share infrastructure.
"It would eventually be a situation where it could become an arms race of how many corporations or partners you could sign up in order to develop at the greatest speed."
In a world outside F1, yes. Not in a sport where self-interest is the first and last thing you are dealing with. It's good to have nice intentions and to see positives. How many times have good intentions led to positives in F1? I can't tell you one from the past few years.You know it makes sense Turbo.
Well first of all, Bernie Ecclestone might be party poper here since his deal with Renault is under jeapordy due Renault not having told this to him, which in extend means the deal with Red Bull (and Lotus too, for that matter) is also in jeapordy. Second, you are still dealing with the issue here that if you allow this for Renault, you are in principle allowing this for other manufacturers too. This is where you would be creating another spending war. No matter how you twist or turn it, the IP sold off is still Renault tech and the same base Renault uses. Nothing out there forbids sharing technology between 2 manufacturers. Even if Red Bull or Renault don't do this, others can in a similar construction.Renault are alleged to have already sold 50% of the IP of their engine. Which means they gain a monetary amount that can help them invest in their own development programme. Once sold...the relationship ends.