Vortex Motio wrote:The proposal was $12 million for current specification power units and $8 million for year-old ones. Ferrari famously veto'd those measures, of course.
I fear we are discussing a political entity more than a piece of hardware. Of course the 4 manufacturers and Red Bull are playing politics on this... and so is the FIA, big time.
Ferrari's veto was on the 12M for current years engines. That's silly and cheap if you include the R&D costs in it. And a bit insulting, 4M for all the R&D?
FIA could suggest (actually, virtually impose, but not for next year, obviously, schmolitics again) the 8M$ for 1 year old engines... and stop at that. With the tokens reintroduced, that surely means an slightly uncompetitive engine.
So a simple rule saying that (from 2017, anything else is silly now) all PU manufacturers must be available to supply 4 other teams with the 8M$, 1 year old PU spec would solve the issue. I refuse to believe that just building and operating the PU costs more than 1M$ per unit, and a proven unit means that 5PU should cover the year. The WC would still go to a current spec engine, the old ones would actually be capable of race wins here and there, and the big manufacturers could have their cheese and eat it too: Make as good a job as Mercedes has done, and you get to win the championships yourself, to deny Red Bull of the current (threatening) PU spec, to have teams with serious ambitions (Williams, etc) pay your full price and help your R&D budget, and have the low teams and newbies flood the field with your year old spec, and produce results with it. Imagine the marketing: "one year ahead of the competition".
Such 8M$, 1 year old PU could be made available via lottery if too many teams want the same, that's the reason anchor points were standarized.
And imagine how good this would sound to potential entrants, being guaranteed a reasonable PU, maybe 1 sec/lap behind, for 8M$.
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