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  1. #1
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    Post CRT - Claiming Rules Teams

    CRT - Claiming Rules Teams, peoples opinion about the new rules for next season? good or bad for MotoGP? IMO good, when you only have 3 fully manufactures in the sport. only 12 prototypes bikes on the grid, but when you hear riders like Casey Stoner doesn't like the rules. is it just making the drive-trains for the Prototype engines cheaper rather than using a BMW 1000cc road engine.
    GP2 Pickems Champion 2006, MotoGP Pickems Champion 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012

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    If they get the shockingly low grid numbers up, they must be a good idea.

    End of discussion as far as I'm concerned.

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    I have no idea whatsoever what Jonny is talking about. I am not mechanically minded. But I think it is good if it just for the 800cc Independent teams. It is some means by which they can be competitive surely. They can afford to be less economical because they have more fuel and having more engines they can run them at a higher rate surely than the 100cc works teams.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Matthew
    If they get the shockingly low grid numbers up, they must be a good idea.

    End of discussion as far as I'm concerned.
    Indeed. Without CRT-s we would have 12 (!) bikes on the grid in 2012. It was about ultimate time of changing something about Moto GP.

    I have already read rumours that besides 6 factory team bikes the rest may well already be CRT-s in 2013. I think CRT-bikes may be the way to go and will start playing a bigger role in the future, because prototypes are simply too expensive for private teams to afford.

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    Seems like the CRT concept is a more complex one than I had anticipated.

    As far as I know an MSMA manufacturer (Yamaha, Honda & Ducati) can purchase an engine from a CRT for 20k Euro's with the gearbox & transmission or for 15k Euro's without gearbox & transmission but not more than 4 times from the same CRT in a single season.

    The FIM rules state:

    “MSMA manufacturers have the right to purchase the engine of a motorcycle entered by a CRT immediately after a race, for a fixed price of:
    “20,000€ (twenty thousands Euros) including gearbox/transmission, or
    “15,000€ (fifteen thousands Euros) without gearbox/transmission.

    “A maximum of four engine claims can be made against one CRT in any one racing season. An MSMA manufacturer may not claim more than one engine per year from the same CRT (i.e. a different claimant for every claimed engine of the same CRT).”
    Other than that I am in the dark. Apart from the fact CRT's will have more engines and more fuel.

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    I don't like the concept from the point of view of there being two sets of rules in MotoGP. However, I'll try and think about it more and explain my position better than in my current drowsy stage at 12.45am. nore:
    Get off my lawn

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    Talking

    Nutshell summary of “CRT” claiming rule as I see it:

    * A “CRT” bike must have a prototype chassis and may use engines from any source (including production machines)

    * Only MSMA (Motorcycle Sports Manufacturers' Association) member can lodged claims against “CRT” teams.
    (20,000€ for engine with gearbox/transmission, or 15,000€ without).

    * MSMA manufacturers can only claim one engine per year from any one “CRT” team and must specify the particular engine on race-day.

    * No more than a combined total of 4 claims per season can be made against any one “CRT” team.

    * “CRT” teams forced to sell engines under this rule are able to purchase replacement engines.

    The intention of the claiming rule is to reduce the likelihood of the more affluent “CRT” teams developing technologies that others cannot or are unable to compete with.

    If they did develop those technologies then they run the risk of having manufacturers buy their engines incorporating the technology for a mere 15,000€

    However, one of the stumbling blocks that so far appears unresolved is that some “CRT” teams may be leasing engines which could not legally be sold by the “CRT” team.

    All that being said, it would be rather embarrassing for a motorcycle manufacturer to “claim” an engine so whether or not any claims are actually lodged, remains to be seen..

    I don’t really care as long as the sport survives, the racing is good, the televised coverage is reasonable and I still have my eyesight, a TV and enough money to pay the electricity and Foxtel (cable TV) bills.


    As the Chinese say.........Correct me if I'm Wong.

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    Quote Originally Posted by EavesFan09
    I have no idea whatsoever what Jonny is talking about. I am not mechanically minded. But I think it is good if it just for the 800cc Independent teams. It is some means by which they can be competitive surely. They can afford to be less economical because they have more fuel and having more engines they can run them at a higher rate surely than the 100cc works teams.
    What i'm trying to say, why not try put a Honda drive-train put into a Suter Chassis for example, something similar what KR team did in 2006 with the Honda engines, also why not Ducati, Honda and Yamaha make their 1000cc drive-trains much cheaper to put into a Suter chassis for example, so it wouldn't be a CRT bike in the first place.
    GP2 Pickems Champion 2006, MotoGP Pickems Champion 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012

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    Quote Originally Posted by Rod Richardson
    * Only MSMA (Motorcycle Sports Manufacturers' Association) member can lodged claims against “CRT” teams.
    (20,000€ for engine with gearbox/transmission, or 15,000€ without).

    * MSMA manufacturers can only claim one engine per year from any one “CRT” team and must specify the particular engine on race-day.
    So when we talk about MSMA manufacturers are we talking about Ducati, Yamaha and Honda? Because I would have thought a level playing field would be better attained if the CRT teams could buy engines from Honda or Ducati or Yamaha. The CRT rule seems to benefit the MSMA manufacturers because it isn't the CRT teams who buy engines. It is the MSMA manufacturers who buy from the CRT teams.

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    Post by EavesFan
    "So when we talk about MSMA manufacturers are we talking about Ducati, Yamaha and Honda? Because I would have thought a level playing field would be better attained if the CRT teams could buy engines from Honda or Ducati or Yamaha. The CRT rule seems to benefit the MSMA manufacturers because it isn't the CRT teams who buy engines. It is the MSMA manufacturers who buy from the CRT teams."

    You've just about got it.
    It appears to me that any bike manufacturer who is a member of MSMA, regardless of whether they are involved in racing, could claim an engine and transmission from a "CRT" team.

    BUT I get back to the common belief that the rule was designed in an effort to keep the playing field level between "CRT" team bikes (not to make them competitive with Moto GP1 machines) and to discourage the more wealthy "CRT" teams from funding the development of technology that is beyond the means or ability of others.

    However, it is the possibility of the claiming rule being used that is intended to limit the development and cost of running a "CRT" bike.

    The majority of Moto GP bikes would leave a "CRT" bike for dead on a dry track so there is no logical reason I could identify for an MSMA member manufacturer already involved in Moto GP to even bother using the claiming rule.

    Don't expect "CRT" bikes to be competitive with Moto GP 1 bikes. It will work out similar in practices to British Superbikes and the Evo class machines. Might pay to call them Moto GP 1 A and 1B.

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