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- QLD, Australia
- Small_Fryz
Ferrari wont ever leave F1 lol, been in it since it started...
But it will be interesting to see how this all develops!
But it will be interesting to see how this all develops!
Yes I too think the medals idea was the one to make to engine deal look better.
KERS should be dropped. There's no point adding a new thing like that which will cost a lot of money when you are trying to cut costs.
Ferrari are strong enough to do as they please motor sport wise.
The Manufacturer teams can take it or leave it as far as F1 is concerned. The board of directors has more to do with it than actual success.
The Constructor teams live and breath F1. It's why they exist. They can go to other race types but they are in F1 because it's F1.
It would cost even more money if you put in all that development and have no product.
True what you say about manufacturer and constructor teams, but Ferrari's cse is a bit more complex. It's true that Ferrari is strong enough to make a credible menace of leaving F1, and F1 without Ferrari wouldn't have the same appeal (even this happens just because F1 fans either love it or hate it, Ferrari doesn't leave anyone indifferent), but ...
Ferrari without F1 would lose much of their appeal. What would they do in motorsports? Respecting their heritage, the only other available (and respectable) option would be LMP's (I drool, just to think of a closed LMP like the Peugeot, but all in red and with the "cavallino rampante" on it). Problem is ... you need a diesel engine to succeed ... And a diesel Ferrari in almost "blasphemy". So ... I guess Ferrari would have to go racing in the IRL league, claiming they wanted to add a Indianapolis 500 win to their racing history (but they don't have the needed "know how" about oval racing) and keep european customers happy with the GT cars in Europe (but that's a litle "Low profile" for Ferrari).
So, in conclusion ... Ferrari is very strong, F1 needs a Ferrari team, but Ferrari also needs F1.
My two cents
Ferrari and the other manufacturers could break away and form their own championship as they planned to do not so very long ago.
The question is, if given a choice would people chose to watch a Manufacturers Championship or an F1 championship with just constructors?
Continued development = continued cost.
Stop development now = no further cost.
KERS is optional anyway.
Ian Phillips of Force India has said that development of KERS will cost three times more that the development on an engine.
Spec-engine deal is done!
http://www.planet-f1.com/story/0,18954,3213_4591276,00.html
Four teams have turned down the offer, so F1 is still a little alive.
Ferrari wont ever leave F1 lol, been in it since it started...
But it will be interesting to see how this all develops!
Not true. It's since come to light that we're only getting half the picture: teams have the option of running with the spec engine if they choose. They're still allowed to develop their own in-house if they wish. The spec engine is designed not simply to cut costs for current teams, but to lower the start-up costs for prospective teams. I can see a new entrant doing two or three seasons with the Cosworth power plant, before switiching to an in-house engine of their own or purchasing fro someone like Renault or Ferrari if they decide that there is a future in F1.And so begins the death of F1...
Most of the 3 litre teams were powered by the Cosworth DFV in the 70's. F1 didn't die then. It won't die now.
Too many manufacturer teams is far worse for the sport than a spec engine. Manufacturers can leave whenever the board of directors feels like it.
Racing teams of constructors stick with the sport because it's the reason they exist.
Not true. It's since come to light that we're only getting half the picture: teams have the option of running with the spec engine if they choose. They're still allowed to develop their own in-house if they wish. The spec engine is designed not simply to cut costs for current teams, but to lower the start-up costs for prospective teams. I can see a new entrant doing two or three seasons with the Cosworth power plant, before switiching to an in-house engine of their own or purchasing fro someone like Renault or Ferrari if they decide that there is a future in F1.
I definitely don't want a spec engine though, and I really hate the direction F1 is seemingly going. Taking out the technology and great differences between the teams is basically taking out the heart of F1 just as much as taking out Ferrari would be.
Well then, the ability to run with an in-house powerplant is a purely cosmetic decision. Must be more to humour the teams threatening to pull out than anything else, but I cannot for the life of me picture a modern Ferrari running with a Cosworth engine.The rules, however, say otherwise. First off, teams have to sign a three-year contract with Cosworth - but we have no idea what powerplants will be available in four years, since they might develop a whole new one.
At the same time, why switch to a Renault/Ferrari? The engines will be regulated so that no measured performance parameter exceeds the spec-engine's data by more than +-0.5% - so the manufacturer engines will be, essentially, the same. No more Ferrari flat-12s and Renault Turbo V6s, then - just a sea of Cosworths without an option that may or may not be superior.
Most of the 3 litre teams were powered by the Cosworth DFV in the 70's. F1 didn't die then. It won't die now.
Too many manufacturer teams is far worse for the sport than a spec engine. Manufacturers can leave whenever the board of directors feels like it.
Racing teams of constructors stick with the sport because it's the reason they exist.