Surely the FIA just state all people working at the circuit or at the factory have to be employed by the team. problem solved.
It sounds to me like Frank Dernie is (as they say in the UK) taking the piss. Either the sport is serious about cost control or it isn't.
FIA always do what they think is better for the competition, even if many of us disagreesubcritical71 wrote: ↑12 Sep 2020, 18:09The FIA have too often shown they don’t have interest in enforcing their own rules.
Don´t think they should do anything. There´s a big rule change so anything learnt now will be useful only for first months of the new ruleset. Once they gain some experience with the new cars past knownledge will be obsolete so no point trying to police this.Jolle wrote: ↑13 Sep 2020, 11:08I wonder what they will do with knowledge and studies done already within the company. Daimler has the biggest advantage here, with Renault, FIAT and HAAS closely following. Or, for the teams with a big company behind them, starting a China, India or Taiwan base with lower costs.
I think Daimler and others have a big library on extreme material behaviour, suspension kinetics, etc etc. The details that are very pricy.Andres125sx wrote: ↑13 Sep 2020, 11:29Don´t think they should do anything. There´s a big rule change so anything learnt now will be useful only for first months of the new ruleset. Once they gain some experience with the new cars past knownledge will be obsolete so no point trying to police this.Jolle wrote: ↑13 Sep 2020, 11:08I wonder what they will do with knowledge and studies done already within the company. Daimler has the biggest advantage here, with Renault, FIAT and HAAS closely following. Or, for the teams with a big company behind them, starting a China, India or Taiwan base with lower costs.
In F1 few things are usefull for more than a few months or a season as much, at least when there´s a huge rule change.
This exactly. Even if Merc or Ferrari manage to find an extra 10% to spend (and that would be a massive amount to hide), that will still leave them far below the level that they're at now and much, much closer to the rest of the field.Andres125sx wrote: ↑13 Sep 2020, 11:17I think teams will continue finding ways to invest more money than what FIA is trying to allow, but even so the investment will be much lower than currently so all teams will be closer in the track wich is the real intention.
He was just pointing something out which doesn't seem to have been considered. Driver salary isn't included in the cap so save money by lumping staff to them.
There is the possibility then that what we today call a 'driver transfer' would include driver, phisio and health, legal and financial plus the pitcrew, tactician, and several more 'personal crew'.jjn9128 wrote: ↑13 Sep 2020, 21:32He was just pointing something out which doesn't seem to have been considered. Driver salary isn't included in the cap so save money by lumping staff to them.