are they?swarren7 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2018, 23:57If all the manufactures/teams are against the new 2018 rule of only 3 engines for the season I propose the following: All the team principals get together and decide on a specific race and every car from each team change all the engine components at the same time after qualifying. In this scenario, all the teams would be penalized the same so the qualifying order wouldn't change and they would all gain an extra engine for the season. Thoughts?
they are almost all in sync for the first upgrade in Barcelona. but teams are ultimately out for themselves. if you had marginal engine but your upgrade was ready why would you wait just because of a gentleman's agreement.swarren7 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2018, 23:57If all the manufactures/teams are against the new 2018 rule of only 3 engines for the season I propose the following: All the team principals get together and decide on a specific race and every car from each team change all the engine components at the same time after qualifying. In this scenario, all the teams would be penalized the same so the qualifying order wouldn't change and they would all gain an extra engine for the season. Thoughts?
Motorsport could almost be defined as "I can do better than you". These are competitive people trying to outdo each other. Where's the surprise?
No "false economy" at all, the customer teams wanted cheaper lease rates(and they got it), the manufacturers agreed to do so by lowering the number of PUs for the year, everyone(that matters) is happy, except for some fans.J.A.W. wrote: ↑15 Feb 2018, 05:18Seems to me - to be yet another counter-productive effect of the current (ill-considered) 'economy run' formula.
False economy - due to 'unforseen consequences' ( by purblind management-type regulation promulgators),
by which the unit cost of each engine goes up - in proportion to its (unrealistic) power VS longevity requirement.
ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑27 Feb 2018, 00:24No "false economy" at all, the customer teams wanted cheaper lease rates(and they got it), the manufacturers agreed to do so by lowering the number of PUs for the year, everyone(that matters) is happy, except for some fans.J.A.W. wrote: ↑15 Feb 2018, 05:18Seems to me - to be yet another counter-productive effect of the current (ill-considered) 'economy run' formula.
False economy - due to 'unforseen consequences' ( by purblind management-type regulation promulgators),
by which the unit cost of each engine goes up - in proportion to its (unrealistic) power VS longevity requirement.
One would think, since cost cutting was the excuse for these engine rules, that basic rebuilds would be allowed between events, but unfortunately it is not as that would make way too much sense.FastFreddy wrote: ↑24 Jun 2018, 05:17So knowing about zero about this three engine rule and F1 rules in general, I need to ask what may be a silly question. Are these three engines sealed, then run them till they fail or performance declines until they are uncompetitive, basically all year, or do these units get maintenance between races?
FastFreddy
If F1 thinks that it is 'saving money' by only letting teams replace engines 3 times then they are wrong. Manufactures will still spend the same on improvements for the engine, if not more because the margin for error is smaller and the need improvement for each version is bigger - works teams would be cutting there nose off to spite there face if they didn't.ENGINE TUNER wrote: ↑27 Feb 2018, 00:24No "false economy" at all, the customer teams wanted cheaper lease rates(and they got it), the manufacturers agreed to do so by lowering the number of PUs for the year, everyone(that matters) is happy, except for some fans.J.A.W. wrote: ↑15 Feb 2018, 05:18Seems to me - to be yet another counter-productive effect of the current (ill-considered) 'economy run' formula.
False economy - due to 'unforseen consequences' ( by purblind management-type regulation promulgators),
by which the unit cost of each engine goes up - in proportion to its (unrealistic) power VS longevity requirement.
It doesn't make sense to me. Allowing 'basic rebuilds' would just be another rule ripe for exploitation and stretching of the rules. You can't write an F1 rule with a discretionary term like 'basic'.Zynerji wrote: ↑24 Jun 2018, 05:20One would think, since cost cutting was the excuse for these engine rules, that basic rebuilds would be allowed between events, but unfortunately it is not as that would make way too much sense.FastFreddy wrote: ↑24 Jun 2018, 05:17So knowing about zero about this three engine rule and F1 rules in general, I need to ask what may be a silly question. Are these three engines sealed, then run them till they fail or performance declines until they are uncompetitive, basically all year, or do these units get maintenance between races?
FastFreddy
Gaskets, bearings, piston rings and a rehone.zac510 wrote: ↑26 Jun 2018, 03:33It doesn't make sense to me. Allowing 'basic rebuilds' would just be another rule ripe for exploitation and stretching of the rules. You can't write an F1 rule with a discretionary term like 'basic'.Zynerji wrote: ↑24 Jun 2018, 05:20One would think, since cost cutting was the excuse for these engine rules, that basic rebuilds would be allowed between events, but unfortunately it is not as that would make way too much sense.FastFreddy wrote: ↑24 Jun 2018, 05:17So knowing about zero about this three engine rule and F1 rules in general, I need to ask what may be a silly question. Are these three engines sealed, then run them till they fail or performance declines until they are uncompetitive, basically all year, or do these units get maintenance between races?
FastFreddy
But then what's more basic than not having to police it at all?Zynerji wrote: ↑26 Jun 2018, 04:21Gaskets, bearings, piston rings and a rehone.
Basic enough to police? They build the entire chassis under FIA supervision, they can rebuild an ICE the same way.