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Old 01-10-2022, 11:24 AM   #888 (permalink)
ZCanadian
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DLSTR View Post
Money will limit the ability to over come an early fast winning team. So..........the budget is about to be a limiter for those who are slower and not winning.


https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/fe...-2022/7167390/

Ferrari: Budget cap will mean fewer in-season updates in F1 2022
Ferrari director Laurent Mekies is expecting Formula 1 teams to push out fewer in-season car developments in 2022 due to budget cap constraints.


Co-author: Luke Smith
Jan 10, 2022, 5:28 AM
Last season most F1 teams halted any development push on their 2021 cars early in a bid to get ahead of the game for this year's all-new technical regulations.

While 2021 was an outlier in that regard, Mekies believes the sport's budget cap will still limit in-season developments compared to pre-2020 levels, as the financial restrictions put in place to make F1 more sustainable will reduce the number of updates teams can afford to pump out.

"Not compared to this year, because this year obviously was near zero, or at least for us was very little, but if you go back to 2019, 2018, we think you will see less," Mekies said.

"In 2018, 2019, in the big teams, you had something every race on the car or every other race.

"It sounds difficult from our perspective to have a high number of updates with the constraints that we have."

The cost cap, which has been lowered to a base figure of $140m this year - excluding add-ons - means F1's biggest teams have had to be more disciplined about where and when to spend the budget they earmarked for developments.

That luxury problem particularly affects big spenders Mercedes, Red Bull and Ferrari, teams which have already had to radically downsize their teams to fit within the budget cap.

"You need to keep a budget to develop during the year, because you will learn more and more, and therefore you will need ways to adjust. This has been the biggest challenge," explained Mekies, whose Ferrari team finished third in the 2021 constructors' championship.

"Once you have defined that envelope, that's what you have for aero development, that's what you have for mechanical development, then it goes to each department and aero will say: 'OK with that, I will be able to do two developments or three developments', and then you reschedule all your plans to feed that.

"That's effectively what we do now. How much of a challenge it is depends on your level of competitiveness to the others."

But Mekies warns that if 2022's pre-season testing unearths several issues on the new cars that need to be addressed quickly, fixing those problems could mean teams may have to dip into their development pot earlier than planned and sacrifice some in-season updates.

"If you have a big issue at the beginning of the year and nothing is correlating and so on, you may invest some of your package two or package three money," Mekies added. "You need to fix it anyway now, so you take your parts, you put them into the bin, and that's the way you will deal with it."
Which basically means we won't get the best racing possible in 2022. Teams like Alfa, Haas and Williams did not throw a lot of dollars at upgrades this past year, but frankly they'd have better chances of being hit by lighting twice than cracking the 2022 car out of the gate. Red Bull, Mercedes, and Ferrari certainly brought a lot of upgrades to the 2021 table. RBR had to, as they may well have lost Max if they couldn't provide him with a competitive car. Now, they have taken on the engine from Honda, which must have eaten into their budget as well (just to maintain the status quo PU). Ferrari and AMG seem to have been more cagey about their upgrades, but it appears from the second half of their seasons that they invested rather heavily. I question whether McLaren had the funds to spend up to the budget cap in 2021.

So my guess is that we'll see haphazard results for the first half of the year, with tweaks brought in later in the season. The most adaptable drivers will really shine - but they can only do so much to make up for a less than ideal car. If that is what F1 calls fairer racing, then it is just going to benefit the smaller teams, not really the fans.
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