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View Full Version : Brawn GP auctioning off old Honda F1 cars



CNR
4th June 2009, 23:52
this looks like brawn will get more money back
http://www.classiccar.co.nz/news/7900/brawn-gp-auctioning-off-old-honda-f1-cars



Historic race cars, scale 1:1 show cars and a range of items from the team’s collection are amongst the lots on offer. The Formula One cars to be sold date from 2001 to 2006 and cover the ownership periods of the team by British American Tobacco and Honda Motor Company. The cars have been driven by top drivers including former World Champion Jacques Villeneuve, Jenson Button and Rubens Barrichello.
The race and show cars will be in rolling chassis form (without engines or other ancillaries) and estimates are expected to range from £7,000 - £22,000. In addition, up to 100 lots of memorabilia will be sold including race overalls, component spares and merchandise.

ioan
4th June 2009, 23:55
Why don't they sell the cars with engine et all?!
They could get much more money for them and they do not need old engines anymore anyway.

Look at Ferrari, they sell lmost all F1 cars more than a couple of years old, and make good money out of it, not 22.000/chassis.

Sleeper
5th June 2009, 00:27
^Because Honda own all the engines and not the team.

gloomyDAY
5th June 2009, 01:55
They're selling the 2007 chassis?

I assume the owner will buy, burn, and sell the smoldering footage on DVDs.

leopard
5th June 2009, 08:18
Perhaps engine and chassis were prepared separately, there are only cars without engine to be auctioned off.

There isn't stock of car with engine available, Villeneuve crashed them out all in accident. :D

ioan
5th June 2009, 10:39
^Because Honda own all the engines and not the team.

Even the used ones?! What are they going to do with them?!

Knock-on
5th June 2009, 11:55
Even the used ones?! What are they going to do with them?!

I would have thought they wouldn't want to relinquish their intellectual property.

This way collectors can purchase a car for show or one of the companies that allow you to drive in a F1 car can stick an engine in.

ioan
5th June 2009, 14:55
I would have thought they wouldn't want to relinquish their intellectual property.


There is nothing intellectually interesting about the worse F1 engine in the field.



This way collectors can purchase a car for show or one of the companies that allow you to drive in a F1 car can stick an engine in.

Usually serious collectors collect the real thing, not a copy/replica or a stripped down version.

Knock-on
5th June 2009, 15:48
Usually serious collectors collect the real thing, not a copy/replica or a stripped down version.

Well, I should imagine the "joke" collectors will be happy then :)

ioan
5th June 2009, 15:50
Well, I should imagine the "joke" collectors will be happy then :)

They are always happy!

Sleeper
5th June 2009, 15:54
There is nothing intellectually interesting about the worse F1 engine in the field.



Usually serious collectors collect the real thing, not a copy/replica or a stripped down version.
Their V10 was one of the best though.

Ferrari aside, I dont think any of the teams of the last decade sell off old cars complete with engine, and even Ferrari's old ones only leave Maranello on rare occasion.

wmcot
6th June 2009, 07:38
I'll keep checking ebay!

ioan
6th June 2009, 11:05
Their V10 was one of the best though.

Ferrari aside, I dont think any of the teams of the last decade sell off old cars complete with engine, and even Ferrari's old ones only leave Maranello on rare occasion.

Ferrari sells all the modern F1 cars that are older than a couple of years and are not of technological interest to it's competitors.

On the other hand they sell them only to people they pick from their pool of VIP Ferrari owners and they continue offering technical support, for a very high price ofcourse.

Breeze
6th June 2009, 22:41
Brawn GP auctioning off old Honda F1 cars

I expect we may be lucky enough to see one or two immediately before or after next year's GP Monaco...............

at the end of an anchor line.......lifestyles of the rich and famous.