First we would need to have 12 solid teams in F1.WhiteBlue wrote:In this case I go along with Joe Saward
The manufacturer cycle mechanism is well known due to more than 100 years of observations in motor sport. The lesson is learned and must not be forgotten. Manufacturers are good for the sport but they must be prohibited to take control of it.JoeSaward wrote:Very rapidly Formula 1 would cease to have 12 solid teams, and the field would be reduced to eight teams, each manufacturing three cars, but what chance would there be for those at the back to move forward? And how easy would it be to find funding? The next logical step to support the sport would be six teams making four cars each. But look what happened when multi-car teams dominated Grand Prix racing in the 1930s or early 1950s. The opposition simply died out and when the dominant manufacturers decided that they had used F1 enough, they pulled out and left the sport in a mess.
In any case, Formula 1 has already been through this cycle of development with Red Bull Racing providing machinery for Scuderia Toro Rosso, and McLaren coming close to a supply deal with Prodrive. The other teams recognised the danger of what was happening and the idea was abandoned, particularly after Scuderia Toro Rosso won the Italian Grand Prix, something which would have been inconceivable a few years earlier.
The sport is better off with more two-car teams, even if some are weak.
I´m not sure I would call HRT a "solid" team.
Secondly, I think he answers his own question rather nicely.
Somehow I would like to think, that it is far easier to attract sponsorship and driver talent when you can offer a Newey designed car with an competetive engine, then if you offer hot air, big dreams a pile of crap and a Cosworth customer engine. ( btw no disrespect for the Cosworth engine here)
How much chance stands HRT to beat the likes of McLaren, Red Bull and Ferrari as it is now?
I think we need to discriminate between a 3 car team (like Ferrari and/or McLaren running 3 factory cars) and the possibility so sell cars to customer teams, as the RBR/STR model or a Prodrive team running McLaren chassis.
While I agree and it is true that a "car manufacturer" such as Toyota,Honda and BMW can/and will walk away from the sport(F1) at any time if it does not fit their current strategy, I can´t see the same happen for the likes of McLaren and/or Williams which are first and mainly "race car manufacturers/teams" and F1 is basicly their only "Raison d'État".
There was a quite healthy period of F1, where it was quite normal for a team to campain another Brabham or March chassis with a customer engine, and doing quite all right.
So I would say the answer is not as clear cut, as some want to make it sound like.