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8 Mar 2012, 14:21 (Ref:3037017) | #26 | ||
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SFW stopped the last customer car deals going through (Prodrive), because he said that it would be unfair for someone to come in and buy a Ferrari, McLaren or Red Bull chassis, and then watch them build up their infrastructure while he had to spend his money solely on trying to beat the newcomers kit cars. So it's strange that they think the RRA should work. |
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8 Mar 2012, 14:43 (Ref:3037035) | #27 | |||||
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8 Mar 2012, 14:56 (Ref:3037050) | #28 | |||
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additionally this would work better if teams were involved in F1 for long enough for the penalties to mean anything to them. Mclaren ate a 100mil penalty because they wanted to remain in F1...i cant see a customer team caring as much. |
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8 Mar 2012, 15:00 (Ref:3037052) | #29 | |||
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No it's not. There are off-the-book payments. Work could be outsourced and the FIA would have no way of knowing the real costs that went into designing something. You could have sponsors that give the team a smaller amount of money than previously planned but they cover part of the engineering and driver costs which would reduce the amount the team pays. (e.g. Instead of main sponsor giving a team $20 million, they give them $10 million, cover a driver's salary outside the realm of the F1 team $5 million, and then throw $5 million to an engineering staff as a "bonus".) Our sports in the U.S. are largely ran on salary caps and they have a large number of loopholes.
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8 Mar 2012, 15:22 (Ref:3037061) | #30 | ||
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the world of forensic accounting might not be as glamorous as F1 but it is quite refined. these are massive corporations with every deposit being accounted for in bank accounts and every payment issued via a company cheque and additionally being reported as an income or expense to their local tax authorities. for them to be making off the book payments would suggest that they (and their suppliers) are not only defrauding any RRA agreements but also the country which they operate in. they may bend the rules but they are hardly criminal organizations.
given enough time every penny they have ever received or spent can be accounted for and if they dont have invoices or their records are not kept in an open manner they get fined. but you are right, the most serious penalty is one they would never impose on a top team. |
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8 Mar 2012, 15:38 (Ref:3037070) | #31 | ||
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8 Mar 2012, 15:46 (Ref:3037071) | #32 | ||||
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'Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines.' - Enzo Ferrari |
8 Mar 2012, 15:56 (Ref:3037080) | #33 | ||||
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Forensic accounting (as pointed out elsewhere) is also a very high tech way of keeping things in check. Even if you couldn't say that any team had spent exactly 40 million, you would still have something that is much fairer than we have now. Quote:
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Then you have the problem of who is buying what car and with whose money. I'm not too sure that Red Bull would be keen to sell a car to a third party with funds provided by Ferrari. It all gets rather complicated in the end, when the real problem is that some teams are still spending far too much money. |
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8 Mar 2012, 16:08 (Ref:3037088) | #34 | ||
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This is because some teams are unwilling to allow outside agencies to look at their accounts. More of which we shall hear of later on in the season. |
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8 Mar 2012, 16:19 (Ref:3037097) | #35 | ||||
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'Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines.' - Enzo Ferrari |
8 Mar 2012, 16:22 (Ref:3037099) | #36 | |
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McLaren know how lucky they were to get only a $100,000,000 fine. But the main point was to make the team look dishonest (as indeed it was), which can have far more damaging effects than a huge fine or a ban.
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8 Mar 2012, 16:44 (Ref:3037108) | #37 | ||
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People like PURE don't want the rug being pulled from under their feet when they're half way through developing a four cylinder turbo engine and then are told it's going to be a V6. What would have been even worse is that they could have been told that they could have any configuration of engine that they liked, but then they'd better hope that someone builds a chassis for it to fit into, some time in 2013. No probs if you have nothing to hide. Last edited by Marbot; 8 Mar 2012 at 16:50. |
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8 Mar 2012, 17:36 (Ref:3037135) | #38 | |
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8 Mar 2012, 17:44 (Ref:3037139) | #39 | ||
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Great discussion.
BR, you raise a valid point. I don't want to see more teams having to move aside for the bigger team they brought the chassis from, because let's face it, team orders are now legal. Also with the restrictions, it means newer teams would just be handed a pretty competent chassis that's basically completely up to standard of the midfielders, which isn't really fair for any of the other midfield teams. Also, as mentioned, if the RRA can 'work', why couldn't a cap work? Could you not have delegates from the FIA working for each team overseeing all expenditure? Plus, as was also mentioned, the cap is only for the spending on the car itself, not anything else. Selby |
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8 Mar 2012, 18:14 (Ref:3037152) | #40 | ||
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MotoGP will be running a system of claiming rules teams (CRT) this season, which basically allows production based motorcycles to race with the prototypes and also allows them other benefits like more fuel during the race and more engines per season. Essentially, it's a two tier championship. The rules are fairly long winded, but are something that could be implemented by many series, should they find themselves in the dire state that MotoGP has. http://www.crash.net/motogp/news/168...ming_rule.html MotoGP is also of the mind that the CRT bikes will be a full time replacement for the prototype bikes in the near future. |
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9 Mar 2012, 08:52 (Ref:3037408) | #41 | |||||
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'Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines.' - Enzo Ferrari |
9 Mar 2012, 14:09 (Ref:3037517) | #42 | ||
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Even Luca di Montezemolo understands that costs must be cut if F1 is to survive.
His latest 'battle cry': "If Formula One still wants Ferrari it must change and go back to being at the cutting edge of research, while always keeping an eye on costs." I'm sure that Mr Philip Morris agrees with him wholeheartedly. Quote:
You see, this is the thing. Car manufacturers are moving on from the internal combustion engine, but motorsport isn't. Indeed it has been said that motorsport will be the last bastion of the internal combustion engine. I dare say that most F1 fans wouldn't be at all pleased with what the teams would have in store for them if the engine regulations were left open. I think that even the 2014 engine regulations don't really tell the full story of which direction most car manufacturers are heading in. We should think ourselves lucky that they have come up with a reasonable compromise. Why not. It's their championship. |
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9 Mar 2012, 21:21 (Ref:3037701) | #43 | ||
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Oh poor Philip Morris.
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11 Mar 2012, 16:28 (Ref:3038355) | #44 | ||||
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'Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines.' - Enzo Ferrari |
11 Mar 2012, 18:00 (Ref:3038394) | #45 | ||
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If you had maybe said to Toyota that all of the chassis will be of equal performance, and all that you need spend money on is the engine, then it's quite possible that Ralf Schumacher and Jarno Trulli would have been multiple world champions by now. Having said that, an overall budget of £40m would have certainly sorted out the engineers from the idiots. It may be that some of the less well off teams will have to make do with an old V12 Ferrari engine. Oh bum! |
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11 Mar 2012, 19:44 (Ref:3038451) | #46 | |
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Bernie now wants a budget cap.
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/97969 If we have a budget cap thenthere would be no need for smaller teams to use other teams chassis. Mind you Bernie has been bouncing a few ideas recently, could it have anything to do with concorde negotiations? |
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11 Mar 2012, 21:02 (Ref:3038490) | #47 | ||
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After all, Bernie, after all...
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12 Mar 2012, 14:06 (Ref:3038824) | #48 | |||
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'Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines.' - Enzo Ferrari |
12 Mar 2012, 15:25 (Ref:3038874) | #49 | ||
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I'd like to see that being put to the test in real terms. Because, at the end of the day, it's no good continuing to develop a technology on an F1 car, if you only got around the problems you had with it by coating it in a thick layer of Gold or some other precious metal. |
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12 Mar 2012, 17:17 (Ref:3038913) | #50 | |
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Why should they have to? Formula One shouldn't have to be a place where every team has to do all of the things by themselves. It wasn't that way up until the tobacco sponsorships made it possible, and even then it wasn't the only way. Ligier were basically given a Benetton in 95 and didn't win a race. Sauber were given Ferrari's old cars and didn't win races. It's not a guarantee, but it IS a great relief , and I 'd argue that it's as pure a notion as there is in Grand Prix racing.
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