Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

General
Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

Audi surprises rivals as it ran upgraded F1 engine at Barcelona GP after ADUO verdict

Formula 1
Austrian GP
Audi surprises rivals as it ran upgraded F1 engine at Barcelona GP after ADUO verdict

How Verstappen almost conquered the world’s greatest circuit

Feature
Intercontinental GT Challenge
How Verstappen almost conquered the world’s greatest circuit

From simulator to stopwatch: The creative evidence teams have used to dispute F1 race results

Formula 1
Austrian GP
From simulator to stopwatch: The creative evidence teams have used to dispute F1 race results

FIA confirms 2027 F1 power unit changes

Formula 1
Austrian GP
FIA confirms 2027 F1 power unit changes

Aprilia faces its biggest challenge right now – and Marquez is just one part of it

Feature
MotoGP
Czech GP
Aprilia faces its biggest challenge right now – and Marquez is just one part of it

How Formula E’s F1-like calendar sees the two series converging – but also diverging

Formula E
How Formula E’s F1-like calendar sees the two series converging – but also diverging

FIA announces Rally2 car upgrade kit to increase competition for WRC 2027

WRC
Rally Greece
FIA announces Rally2 car upgrade kit to increase competition for WRC 2027

Lotus becomes latest F1 team to speak out against customer cars

Lotus has become the latest Formula 1 team to insist it will never switch to customer cars

F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone this week outlined details of the plan he claims could happen "if we made a big enough effort".

But despite the proposal dominating discussions at last week's Strategy Group meeting, so far Force India, Sauber, and now Lotus have voiced their strong opposition.

Lotus CEO Matthew Carter told AUTOSPORT: "We're exactly the same. We wouldn't want to be a customer team either.

"We don't sit on the Strategy Group any more, but I don't see how the customer car idea is going to work anyway.

"When it was talked about in the Strategy Group last year, it was using a year-old Mercedes or Red Bull, or whatever, which obviously wouldn't work.

"Even with a new chassis it doesn't work for us as a business model because of the set-up at Enstone and everything we do. We'd head downward.

"The one thing is I guess it makes entry cheaper for those teams wanting to come in, which isn't a bad thing."

Carter has, however, voiced a positive response to some of the other ideas aired in a bid to take F1 in a more upward direction again.

On the table is the potential introduction of bigger rear tyres and wider cars to increase grip, downforce, and ultimately speed as the aim is to make F1 cars faster by five to six seconds per lap.

"That's something that's certainly viable," added Carter. "Downforce is the key.

"When they narrowed the rear wings [for 2009] that affected the downforce, and there were also rules over the front wings as well.

"So if they open up those, then yeah, we could make quicker cars.

"But then it's how they loosen the regulations so it doesn't become an arms race again, with the bigger teams throwing increasing amounts of cash into developing the cars."

REFUELLING A WORRY

Like many others, Carter has expressed concerns on the potential return of refuelling, which was banned at the end of 2009 due to cost and on safety grounds.

Although the majority of the current F1 drivers are in favour, the reasons for the ban remain the main worry now.

"As far as I'm aware nothing has changed to make it any cheaper or safer," said Carter.

"I know the Technical Working Group will decide whether it makes sense or not.

"I don't know if there is a way to bring the costs down, maybe the same rig for all the teams. I'm sure there is something they could do."

Previous article Monaco GP: Sebastian Vettel fastest in final practice for Ferrari
Next article Pirelli sets out conditions for staying in Formula 1 beyond 2016

Top Comments

Latest news