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SurfaceUnits
07-20-09, 06:57 PM
Written by: SPEED Staff / GMM
07/20/2009
GMM Newswire

Cosworth is reportedly working hard to re-tune its 2010 Formula One engine in order to compete with F1's other manufacturers.

The British engine maker was recently at the centre of the political crisis, with the FIA wanting next year's Cosworths to be exempt from the mandatory 18,000 rev limit.

The FIA president's argument was that because the 2010 Cosworth will be based on the engine used by Williams in 2006, the new teams Campos, USF1 and Manor would otherwise be massively off the pace.

Patrick Head said that even when running 20,000 rpm next year, the Cosworths would be disadvantaged in the area of weight and tire wear because they use "clearly more fuel than the current engines".

Ultimately, however, FOTA won the argument and Cosworth must adhere to the regular engine regulations next year.

Only one month ago, Mosley said the British firm had "neither the time nor the resources to retune for 2010".

Spain's Diario AS reports that Campos is finding the 18,000 rpm-limited Cosworth a "disaster". "The British firm is working on an evolution to fit the current regulations," the newspaper added.

STD
07-20-09, 09:24 PM
They trusted Max and signed on. Guess they have to run the lumps for a contracted amount of years as well.

SurfaceUnits
07-22-09, 12:59 PM
Cosworth confident engines will be competitive
Wednesday 22nd July 2009

Cosworth has allayed fears that the engines they will provide to the new teams next year won't be competitive.

The engine manufacturer will supply power units to Manor Grand Prix, Campos Meta1 and Team US F1 next year. The engines though has been reconfigured to run at 18,000rpm, much lower than the 20,000rpm it was given permission for by the FIA.

Tim Routsis, Cosworth's CEO, insists they will provide the teams with a reliable and competitive engine.

"There is no doubt that the teams have made some epically big strides over the last few years in terms of engine reliability," Routsis is quoted on the James Allen website. "The two things that really matter are that we provide a reliable and competitive engine.

"We realised that there was no future for anybody if we rocked up with an uncompetitive engine. We wanted to verify that what we had made sense. So what we did was produce a complex model of the engine's performance as it will be in 2010 and gave it to a third party agency with the largest body of data.

"We asked the question, 'If you were to take all the results this year of the top three teams and substitute this engine into their cars, would it have affected the outcome of any of the races?' Because that's the ultimate measure of the competitiveness of the engine."

cameraman
07-22-09, 02:33 PM
Mighty tasty Kool-Aid right there.