Ok, I've avoided this thread until now for a number of reasons (primarily the title not even being spelt right), but with all the talk about losing teams, here are my suggestions for a way to stop F1 falling to well below 10 teams:
- Remove the Constructors Championship and replace it with a Teams Championship. Scoring and prize money operates as it does for the WCC now.
- Chassis manufacturers can supply a maximum of 2 teams
- Chassis manufacturers can be Team owners or completely independent
- Engine and Gearbox mounting standardised to allow any Engine or Gearbox to be used with any Chassis
- Chassis development is open, as it is now, but once a part has been used in parc ferme conditions by a single team, that part must be available to any other customer teams of that Chassis.
And that's it. Everything else stays as it is now or as its planned to be in the future. These are designed around removing the requirement for a team to build its own chassis. At the end of the day this is why Marussia and Caterham are not competitive. The engines and gearboxes and drivers (to some extend) are comparable with the rest of the grid, but the Chassis is poor and the result is they are slow. If they could buy a chassis from someone competent in making one they suddenly jump into the midfield without having to spend gazillions on their own aero development.
The parc ferme rule is to allow chassis makers who are also team owners to continually develop throughout the season. They can bring development parts to races and use them in Practice sessions, and use them in testing too. But as soon as they decide that part is good enough to give them an advantage in competition, and they use it in Quali or the Race, its available to their customers. This should mean a 1 race advantage, maybe a bit more if its a major part or back to back races, but ultimately it would prevent customer teams being given a spec car at race 1 and then getting no upgrades throughout the whole year.
I'd envisage this producing a mix of relationships. There would be some really strong ties (RBR and Toro Rosso being effectively a 4 car team), some independent teams partnering with a manufacturer (Ferrari building everything, and supplying Haas), and then some complete customers. Imagine Prodrive make a chassis but don't own a team, and Caterham buy a Prodrive chassis, a Renault engine, and a Red Bull gearbox and suddenly are able to compete in the midfield without going bankrupt? Meanwhile Sauber buy the other Prodrive chassis, and mate it to a Mercedes engine and Williams gearbox and chase them down.
You also make chassis manufacturing competitive, especially for manufacturers who don't run their own team. Just like engines now, if you produce a good one, you get lots of people wanting it, and can charge more. If you produce a dog, nobody wants it, you need to drop your prices, or even end up without a team buying your chassis. The chassis, just like everything else in an F1 car, becomes a component a team buys to go racing. At the moment its the only thing you need to make yourself, and its the one thing that is a black hole of a money pit, and the primary reason slow teams are slow.
Buy changing the Constructors championship to a Teams one means its the Team that get the money. Sure you would see some teams being friendly to other on track, but that happens now anyway. However you would only need 6 chassis makers to have a 24 car grid, whereas now we have 11 for a 22 car grid, and at least 2 of them may soon vanish. Swings and roundabouts, but I think I'd rather see 24 cars close in competition, with a few inter team friendships, than 18 or 20 cars with 4 or so that may as well not bother they are so slow.