cbbcisace wrote:Great points Mario, In my opinion LPS is keeping things quiet, HRT wan't to get rid of Cosworth as they are not happy with the engine and its performance compared to Renault, Mercedes etc.
Isn't the rumour that Cosworth will pull out at the end of this season?
The team is known to be expanding its workforce to near enough double it size at the moment and wants to become on part with what Caterham are doing this year.
Plus 2013 will be a better year as the team won't miss preseason due to strict deadlines being put in by the new Management (Thesan) at the start of this season.
It is true that the Cosworth V8 is lagging some way behind the other engines in the field, in part because Cosworth were out of the sport for an extended period of time and do not have the resources to keep up with the manufacturer teams. The drop off in performance with engine wear was one area that Cosworth themselves admitted was problematic, since they are having to stretch the life of the engines out ever further, and there were a few other issues with driveability and fuel consumption.
However, being locked into a long term contract with Cosworth means that it would not be easy to break away from Cosworth and to find another engine - it wasn't cheap for Caterham to buy themselves out, nor Williams for that matter, and although Renault Sport have been looking to expand their engine supply deals ever further (they are looking into supplying a fifth team with engines), that would require permission from the FIA, something that, although it would probably be given, is not automatically guaranteed. Mercedes seem content to supply just three teams at the moment (there were briefly rumours that Marussia might strike a transmission and engine deal with McLaren and Mercedes, but they died down quite quickly), as are Ferrari, so I think that HRT are struck with Cosworth for now.
For the future, the expectation is that Cosworth will stay in F1 to fulfil its contracts with HRT and Marussia for next year - i.e. until the end of the V8 engine era - but they are not expected to develop an engine for the V6 turbo era unless they can either find corporate sponsorship for the deal (somebody like Ford, for example, who is willing to underwrite a potential bill of €150 million) or the FIA imposed heavy cost control measures.
Now, the FIA has been discussing the possibility of imposing cost control mechanisms in 2013 which could, partially, cover the engines, but some of the teams have been bitterly opposed to the idea - asides from Red Bull and their surrogate, Toro Rosso, who have been arguing with Ferrari over where the limits on the developments of aerodynamics and drivetrain technology should lie and are dead set against an FIA cost cap, Boullier has been urging caution over imposed cost caps (arguing that the proposals need to be fleshed out rather than rushed through, as they all too often are). Williams, meanwhile, who you would expect to benefit from a cost capped formula, have been even more bucolic, with Sir Frank saying that he is "against any kind of interference" from a third party in the affairs of the team.
So, with the expectation that any cost control measures will need to be watered down to be palatable for the teams, it is doubtful that we'll see further restrictions on engine development for the short term. With that, I would expect Cosworth to leave, since they have made it clear repeatedly that they do not - indeed, cannot afford to - want to get caught up in a heavy spending war.