grano123,
Casting a gearcase in titanium (typically an alpha-beta 6Al-4V alloy) has lots of advantages over magnesium or aluminum for an F1 chassis. It has a higher M of E than magnesium or aluminum, it has a CTE that closely matches the transmission's steel gears, bearings and shafts, it has high fatigue limits, it has excellent strength at high temperatures, and it can be attached directly to carbon composite parts without galvanic corrosion problems.
Its drawbacks are that it is a very expensive metal (40 or 50 dollars US per pound), it has a very high melting temperature (over 3000degF) and it is highly reactive to oxygen in a molten state. The only practical way to cast titanium is using a vacuum furnace and a ceramic investment mold. Investment casting is capable of producing very fine details, thin lightweight walls, and very high dimensional accuracy. But the process is very labor intensive and the tooling costs are very high.
http://www.pccstructurals.com/locations ... tanium.php
http://www.alcoa.com/howmet/en/about/br ... /index.asp