Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post here all non technical related topics about Formula One. This includes race results, discussions, testing analysis etc. TV coverage and other personal questions should be in Off topic chat.
User avatar
Phil
66
Joined: 25 Sep 2012, 16:22

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

Andres125sx wrote:I´m not sure about the reason some of you think customers should get same engine than works teams. Can you point me to any top serie where that´s happening?
Maybe you're hung up on the term "customer team", thinking it somehow implies inadequate or inferior, as if they have no right to even compete in the same pool of other teams. Think again.

They are racing-teams. Some of them rooted just as long or longer than some engine-manufacturers in F1. The only difference is that they have no outside market, no history of building cars outside the sport, or engines. Now suddenly, the sport is catering to the needs of these unique 4 teams that have these outside markets and engine divisions. Who is to say that that is right or the way things should be? I follow the principal of majority - and the majority of these teams are not engine-manufacturers, they are racing teams and have built up knowledge and expertise in the field of aero and building racing cars.

They are not any less worthy than all the other teams. They just lack a specific ability and they are, by circumstance of these rules and the shift of power, forced into irrelevancy. Because they are at the mercy of these engine-manufacturers who get to control who gets to play with them and who doesn't.
Not for nothing, Rosberg's Championship is the only thing that lends credibility to Hamilton's recent success. Otherwise, he'd just be the guy who's had the best car. — bhall II
#Team44 supporter

Jonnycraig
Jonnycraig
6
Joined: 12 Apr 2013, 20:48

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

djos wrote:
FoxHound wrote:
djos wrote:If that works it as claimed, that would be an amazing deal for RedBull racing as it gives them control over their own PU and they will no longer be tied down by Renault and their lack of commitment to development!
12 token upgrade a "lack of development"? Red Bull refused to take the engine for 2 races running.
That took them how long... 10 months because by Renault's own admission they weren't sure how to progress.

Also how much extra power and reliability are they bringing, I've seen 1/10th of a second improved lap-time mentioned - what is the actual HP increase? 40HP of a rumored 80HP deficit to Mercedes?
Considering how much consists of just 1 token, 10-12 tokens is basically a brand new package entirely. A brand new PU in 6 months isn't bad going at all tbh.

With regards the performance of the new PU, simulations may show a 1/10th improvement in peak performance, but it may well provide far superior driveability, reliability and integration within the car. Whilst RB were in disputes with Renault though, they had no intention of taking a grid penalty to find out. Equally, judging against Merc is a bit of a waste of time as Ferrari are still well down on peak performance as well. Good driveability, reliability and an inate kindness to tyres from the chassis have allowed them to overtake Williams into best of the rest. They won't be winning titles in the foreseeable future though, just as RB won't.

User avatar
Andres125sx
166
Joined: 13 Aug 2013, 10:15
Location: Madrid, Spain

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

Phil wrote:
Andres125sx wrote:I´m not sure about the reason some of you think customers should get same engine than works teams. Can you point me to any top serie where that´s happening?
Maybe you're hung up on the term "customer team", thinking it somehow implies inadequate or inferior, as if they have no right to even compete in the same pool of other teams.
Exactly that. When top teams invest 300-400M on each season, R&D apart, and customer teams invest under 100M, they´re inferior, like it or not.
Phil wrote:They are not any less worthy than all the other teams. They just lack a specific ability and they are, by circumstance of these rules and the shift of power, forced into irrelevancy. Because they are at the mercy of these engine-manufacturers who get to control who gets to play with them and who doesn't.
No, they lack money, as simple as that. That´s what force them into irrelevancy, as it has always happened in F1, nothing new.

Look at RBR, when there´re resources, there´re solutions. They´ve manage to reach an agreement with Renault to develop their PU independently, so they can fight with works teams and manufacturers at same level.

But if you expect the rest of the teams investing aroung 1/3 or 1/4 the money top teams invest, fighting with top teams, sorry but that will never happen no matter what are the engine rules

User avatar
dans79
267
Joined: 03 Mar 2013, 19:33
Location: USA

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

Andres125sx wrote: No, they lack money, as simple as that. That´s what force them into irrelevancy, as it has always happened in F1, nothing new.
Not just F1, prety much every major sport.
197 104 103 7

User avatar
FoxHound
55
Joined: 23 Aug 2012, 16:50

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

dans79 wrote:
Andres125sx wrote: No, they lack money, as simple as that. That´s what force them into irrelevancy, as it has always happened in F1, nothing new.
Not just F1, prety much every major sport.
You could say pretty much every category of motorsport too. From Go-karts all the way up.
JET set

User avatar
Phil
66
Joined: 25 Sep 2012, 16:22

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

Andres125sx wrote:
Phil wrote:
Andres125sx wrote:I´m not sure about the reason some of you think customers should get same engine than works teams. Can you point me to any top serie where that´s happening?
Maybe you're hung up on the term "customer team", thinking it somehow implies inadequate or inferior, as if they have no right to even compete in the same pool of other teams.
Exactly that. When top teams invest 300-400M on each season, R&D apart, and customer teams invest under 100M, they´re inferior, like it or not.
Err what? RedBull is one of the largest teams, both from a point of number of employees to downright investments. It's well documented in fact. And they are what you would describe as a "customer team". McLaren too btw. Not that it makes any sense - our talk here is all about distinguishing a team that has the ability to build engines and one that has not.

From those, we have 4 that do and 6 that dont. It has absolutely zilch to do with investment.

Again: even if a team without the expertise nor foundation to build engines suddenly found means to spend half a billion would still not make them any more capable to build competitive ones nor would they - because they lack the means to. It still doesnt change the point - which you are dodging - that the sport is now catering to the needs of a minority and why this makes any more sense to what we had before when it catered to the majority. Will you answer this?
Not for nothing, Rosberg's Championship is the only thing that lends credibility to Hamilton's recent success. Otherwise, he'd just be the guy who's had the best car. — bhall II
#Team44 supporter

User avatar
FoxHound
55
Joined: 23 Aug 2012, 16:50

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

You've not so much missed Andres' point as being completely oblivious to what he is saying.

You want equal engines, stating it unfair on those that don't build them.
Yet you are willing to completely ignore that teams with 300/400M budgets are unfairly favoured in comparison to those with 100/150M budgets.

You cannot have one, and dismiss the other.
JET set

User avatar
dans79
267
Joined: 03 Mar 2013, 19:33
Location: USA

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

Phil wrote: Err what? RedBull is one of the largest teams, both from a point of number of employees to downright investments.
Only If you look at the simplest statistics possible. Factory teams are significantly larger, because they have the full weight of their parent companies behind them. Whats that mean? They have bigger coffers, more facilitates, & more brain power, at their disposal if needed.


https://joesaward.wordpress.com/2015/11/05/politics/
Toyota, General Motors, Ford, Honda and Mercedes are all spending more than $20 million a day on R&D and so F1 makes sense for all of them.
Some of the knowledge gained from that research will benefit the race team.

it was widely rumored that Merc enlisted the help from engineers spread throughout the company to develop their PU last year.


Phil wrote: It still doesnt change the point - which you are dodging - that the sport is now catering to the needs of a minority and why this makes any more sense to what we had before when it catered to the majority. Will you answer this?
No Phil he isn't!

You are the one who is either unaware of F1 history, or ignoring it to support your view point. F1 has always favored the major manufactures. Ever heard what FIA used to jokingly stand for? Ferrari International Assistance! It's not a fluke Ferrari has more WCC than anyone else.

http://autoweek.com/article/formula-one ... ormula-one
FIA president Jean Todt will try to persuade Audi, Porsche and Toyota—the three manufacturers whose LMP1 sports-car prototype programs are essential for the FIA World Endurance Championship—to enter Formula One.
http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns31396.html
The current rulebook is dissuading more carmakers, like Toyota, from entering F1.
They want the manufactures involved, everyone else is a second class citizen .
197 104 103 7

NL_Fer
NL_Fer
82
Joined: 15 Jun 2014, 09:48

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

An Indycar 1990s fuel burner will not help f1.

But what do you guys think of a cheaper fuelflow limited engine? Manufactures still have to develop for efficiency, which is road relevant, but less complex. N/A is not dead and still very important in most parts of the world outside europe, so whats wrong with a fuel flow limited V8? Or a twin turbo, using off the shelf conventionsl turbochargers. Standard or no Kers. Running pump fuel.

Best bet would be to keep as much figures the same. So comperable weight/size, exhaust, cooling as the Hybrid V6.

Still, flow limited, for comparable power, they will consume more fuel and need a larger tank.

User avatar
djos
113
Joined: 19 May 2006, 06:09
Location: Melbourne, Australia

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

Jonnycraig wrote: Considering how much consists of just 1 token, 10-12 tokens is basically a brand new package entirely. A brand new PU in 6 months isn't bad going at all tbh.

With regards the performance of the new PU, simulations may show a 1/10th improvement in peak performance, but it may well provide far superior driveability, reliability and integration within the car. Whilst RB were in disputes with Renault though, they had no intention of taking a grid penalty to find out. Equally, judging against Merc is a bit of a waste of time as Ferrari are still well down on peak performance as well. Good driveability, reliability and an inate kindness to tyres from the chassis have allowed them to overtake Williams into best of the rest. They won't be winning titles in the foreseeable future though, just as RB won't.
TBH I think the Ferrari PU is likely pretty close to the Merc but it's the Ferrari chassis and Aero that quite arent in the same league as the Merc and RedBull.
"In downforce we trust"

Cannonballer
Cannonballer
2
Joined: 29 Apr 2015, 03:12

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

bauc wrote:Well if this is true, than its great news for all F1.

O.T. Guys, how reliable is this TJ13 source? I haven't heard of this site before.

Thanks.
As reliable as a broken clock, a sundial at night, or a Honda PU...
Wazari wrote: There's a saying in Japan, He might be higher than testicles on a giraffe...........

User avatar
bauc
33
Joined: 19 Jun 2013, 10:03
Location: Skopje, Macedonia

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

Cannonballer wrote:
bauc wrote:Well if this is true, than its great news for all F1.

O.T. Guys, how reliable is this TJ13 source? I haven't heard of this site before.

Thanks.
As reliable as a broken clock, a sundial at night, or a Honda PU...
Even a broken clock is right twice a day :)
Формула 1 на Македонски - The first ever Macedonian Formula 1 YouTube channel
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJkjCv ... 6rVRgKASwg

wickedz50
wickedz50
0
Joined: 27 Aug 2013, 08:32

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

djos wrote:
Jonnycraig wrote: Considering how much consists of just 1 token, 10-12 tokens is basically a brand new package entirely. A brand new PU in 6 months isn't bad going at all tbh.

With regards the performance of the new PU, simulations may show a 1/10th improvement in peak performance, but it may well provide far superior driveability, reliability and integration within the car. Whilst RB were in disputes with Renault though, they had no intention of taking a grid penalty to find out. Equally, judging against Merc is a bit of a waste of time as Ferrari are still well down on peak performance as well. Good driveability, reliability and an inate kindness to tyres from the chassis have allowed them to overtake Williams into best of the rest. They won't be winning titles in the foreseeable future though, just as RB won't.
TBH I think the Ferrari PU is likely pretty close to the Merc but it's the Ferrari chassis and Aero that quite arent in the same league as the Merc and RedBull.
Ferrari at the moment very happy with their awesome catchup to Merc this season. Their machinery and strategies are self proclaimed genius. Thats how Ferrari is historically. Unless others fall they wont win and they cant be the best to win. So Ferrari 's aims to the top and very pleased to be second best. Next year the results will remain the same unless suddenly Merc falls and its engines starts to blowup every now and then.

User avatar
Andres125sx
166
Joined: 13 Aug 2013, 10:15
Location: Madrid, Spain

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

Phil wrote:Err what? RedBull is one of the largest teams, both from a point of number of employees to downright investments. It's well documented in fact.
Only if you ignore R&D investment. As Dans posted manufacturers are investing huge amount of money on R&D, so even when they invest similar quantities on their F1 teams, RBR still is far from the total investment manufacturers do
Phil wrote:From those, we have 4 that do and 6 that dont. It has absolutely zilch to do with investment.
You can´t seriously say this Phil, in F1, like in any business, it´s all about the money. Those who can invest the biggest quanities are those who get the most benefit. Obviously F1 is not any different
Phil wrote:Again: even if a team without the expertise nor foundation to build engines suddenly found means to spend half a billion would still not make them any more capable to build competitive ones nor would they - because they lack the means to.
Sorry but not true. You could say the same about RBR, and actually people said it when they entered F1... An energy drink company building F1 cars? You must be kidding, they know nothing about this... But as time proved money can buy anything (at least in motorsports :P ), so if they really want to compete with manufacturers, they must become a manufacturer, and that´s perfectly doable if you invest same amount of money than they
Phil wrote:It still doesnt change the point - which you are dodging - that the sport is now catering to the needs of a minority and why this makes any more sense to what we had before when it catered to the majority. Will you answer this?
The only period I know when F1 was good for small teams was in engine freeze era. It was almost a spec engine formula so they have no disadvantage compared with manufacturers.

From the audience POV it was great, but this is F1, you can´t keep that for long or manufacturers will simply quit because they can´t do their job. Also, there was parity in engine department but there still was so much difference in the rest of departments it actually did no big difference, big teams won and small teams couldn´t compete, so there was no reason to keep that pissing off the manufacturers

So basically the sport will always be forced to please some part of the grid, they can please the small teams but then manufacturers will be pissed and posibly quit, or you could please manufacturers and then small teams will be unable to compete. With first option F1 would die, F1 without manufacturers is not posible. But with second option it is perfectly doable, and small teams will cry but they usually accept they can´t compete with teams investing x3, x4 or x10 what they´re investing

So it basically is a matter of choosing the lesser evil, and since giving same engine to small teams will not change that much becuase they still lack resources to compete in the rest of departments, pissing off manufacturers is a nosense and can only hurt F1

User avatar
Phil
66
Joined: 25 Sep 2012, 16:22

Re: Formula One's Engine Crisis

Post

Dans, I will answer this bit (and it's relevant to Andres too):
dans79 wrote:You are the one who is either unaware of F1 history, or ignoring it to support your view point. F1 has always favored the major manufactures.
It's hardly relevant what the sport was a 80, 50 or even 20 years ago. The sport has changed over the years, so have the dynamics. Teams have left, among which were also big car manufacturers, and new teams have joined as well. The sport has also grown from an investment point of view and has been on a steady increase over the years. The only relevant point to this topic is the now and present and what constitutes a viable sport for the imminent future - which is what we're discussing here.

It's a simple matter of undisputed fact that we currently have 2 factory-teams backed by 2 engine manufacturers (Ferrari, Mercedes) and 8 teams in a customer role of a total of 4 engine manufacturer teams as a supplier. Next year, we are assuming we will have 3 factory-teams (Ferrari, Mercedes, Renault) opposed to 7 teams in a customer role to those factory teams. If you include McLaren-Honda and their exclusive arrangement, it is currently 3 factory-teams (Ferrari, Mercedes, McLaren-Honda) and 7 teams in a customer role - for 2016, we're assuming 4 factory-teams and 6 teams in a customer-role. Still a minority.

So yes, the sport with its current regulations is indeed catering to that of a minority. How many these 6 or 7 racing teams in a customer-role who do not have the means, ability and expertise to manufacture their own engines invest is utter irrelevant (which was the point Andres was making). Why? Because at least one of those teams has had a history of huge investments [RedBull] which has gained them a competitive advantage during an engine-freeze period. But it hasn't helped their cause under the current regulations, it has made it worse;

Because being competitive has highlighted the predicament such a team faces: Either you are one of those 6-7 teams in a customer-role and are constituted a threat [case example: RedBull] and the 4 factory-teams / engine suppliers will not supply you with competitive engines or you are not constituted a threat under which getting an engine is not a problem.

The outline is simple:

If you're a team like Williams, part of F1 since over 40 years, and suddenly, perhaps through sponsorship and/or better engineers, gain the means to drastically improve the car to the point they become a threat, Mercedes will no longer have a reason to supply them with competitive engines anymore. If they do, it will be a matter of standing contracts but not choice. They would have no more reason to supply them with competitive engines than they do now of supplying a strong competitor like RedBull.

This is also the reason why the engine manufacturers have been pushing to allow A and B spec engines. It gives them more power and leverage in deciding who gets to play and compete and who doesn't. Some might think this is fair because they are also making the investment, but this is also the first step in guaranteeing that no team in a customer role will ever be able to compete with the factory-team. Some might also call this is monopolizing the sport.

What will happen? These 6-7 teams, still a majority by todays standards, will be further forced outside the sport. They will face the dilemma; Become too competitive (like RedBull) and you bear the risk that your supplier will no longer want to supply you with the best possible engine (artificially limit you), or you are irrelevant to them and you can stay further down the grid - at which point sooner or later, they will deem the sport not a fair competition anymore and either leave or they'll stick around long enough to be forced out either way. The question is; Will the sport have found enough manufacturers to replace them by then, or will we see a period of 3-4 car teams to fill the gaps? Because this is exactly where it is heading, and it might start with next year if we lose RedBull and Torro-Rosso as the first 2 teams.

So the question the sport needs to address; Is if it is willing to lose those current 6-7 racing teams - some of them being part of F1 since 40+ years - by catering to the needs and expertise of those 4 engine-manufacturers and if the sport can be made attractive enough to replace them with more engine-manufacturers entering as factory-teams - OR - if the sport finds a way to make these engines less of a factor at the expense of these factory-teams (that are currently a minority), but making the sport more relevant to the majority of its participants and bring the field closer together like we did during the engine-freeze period in rules that cater to the common-denominator of expertise that all teams can offer and compete on.

Andres wrote:You could say the same about RBR, and actually people said it when they entered F1... An energy drink company building F1 cars?
Oh my... You are aware that RBR simply bought a team right? It was formely known Jaguary Racing, and before that Stewart Grand Prix, its history dating back to 1997. #-o

And no, I don't think we are going to start this discussion again about a team like RedBull starting to build its own complex engines as a solution to all problems - a job even the mighty Honda failed with all the resources, in place facilities, know-how and expertise they have as a car manufacturer. James Allen commented on this, as was there already a lengthy discussion on this in the RedBull thread. I suggest you go read it. And even if RedBull had the means, they are still the rest of the majority of teams to consider that don't have that ability and they have been rooted much longer in F1 than the Milton Keynes squad.

Andres wrote:So basically the sport will always be forced to please some part of the grid, they can please the small teams but then manufacturers will be pissed and posibly quit, or you could please manufacturers and then small teams will be unable to compete.
You make it sound as if all manufacturers want is some kind of monopoly where they can enforce only having to compete with the other factory-teams while keeping their customers at bay due to artificially limiting them with less adequate engines. It's a very warped view of how actual competition is.

What happened to the ages where you competed on the merit of competing and the reward wasn't power, but actual recognition of beating your opponents fair and square? The goal should be to create an attractive sport that wants competitors to join and compete.

As I said, and I'll say it again (and I'll keep repeating it as long as I must...) - I have absolutely no issue with an engine focused formula if we have a majority of engine-manufacturers battling it out among each other.

This isn't the case: Right now, we have 4 engine manufacturers and 6 equally worthy racing teams with just as much history associated with F1 being forced into irrelevancy due to the circumstance these new engines and regulations have created. And the question is; For every team the sport loses due to this circumstance, is there an engine manufacturer in place to take their place and replace them? Clearly, the answer to that question is no, not for next year, assuming both RedBull and Torro-Rosso drop out and it remains to be seen if 2017 will see a change in that.

The simple solution would be to find a middle ground that works for both engine manufacturers and the remaining teams; allow engine development but protect the customer teams by forcing those engine manufacturers to parity (no A-B spec engines) and a maximum price threshold for these engines. Assuming a factory-team still has a non-crucial advantage should be enough for them to prevail over their own customer by creating a better or at least equal car to them. It's also key that the engines get closer to each other as a result of diminishing returns and locked down regulations.
Not for nothing, Rosberg's Championship is the only thing that lends credibility to Hamilton's recent success. Otherwise, he'd just be the guy who's had the best car. — bhall II
#Team44 supporter