Formula Community

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Formula Community
[[{{{logo}}}|200px]]
Category {{{category}}}
Country/Region {{{locale}}}
Founder(s) {{{founder}}}
Inaugural Season TBA
Engine supplier(s) Various
Tyre supplier(s) Nokian
Records


Formula Community is an upcoming team-funded series built from the ground up solely on the team owner's voting power. Initially each of the entering teams were able to invest up to £500,000 to buy in to the series, which bought a share of the voting power. Teams then had to use their remaining cash to purchase vehicles and hire drivers.

List of Teams

Current Teams

Team Owner Ownership of Series
Flag of Bulgaria svg.png DSR Racing Deyan Rangelov 8.43%
Flag of Germany svg.png/Flag of the Netherlands.svg.png Blokkmonsta Motorsport Andrea Schnass 7.22%
Flag of Austria svg.png Loyer Racing Technologies Herbert Loyer & Sons 6.15%
Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Great British Racing Team Ryan Cole 6.02%
Flag of the United States svg.png Outterridge Motorsports Frederick Outterridge 6.02%
Flag of Germany svg.png Renntechnologie GmbH Ralf Schneider 6.02%
Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Reb Lelmas Racing Reb Lelmas 6.02%
Flag of Australia svg.png Australian Racing Academy Mark Webber 4.82%
Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Empire Racing Thomas Travers 4.82%
Flag of Ireland svg.png Pegasus Racing Group Dr. Ciaran Gallagher 4.82%
Flag of Canada svg.png Auricom Industries Paul Belmondo 4.61%
Flag of Spain svg.png AeroCraft Racing Marc Pujolar 3.61%
Flag of Bolivia svg.png El Cártel Suramérica Paulo Pinto & Cristian Carmona 3.61%
Flag of Russia svg.png Restov Racing Edward Restov 3.61%
Flag of Peru svg.png Vasquez Racing Team Luis Vasquez & Rafael Antezana 3.61%
Flag of Indonesia svg.png NKRI Jaya Garuda Axel Putra 3.37%
Flag of Japan svg.png TechCraft Asuka Kuwashima 3.09%
Flag of France svg.png Equipe Gauthier Guillaume Gauthier 3.01%
Flag of Germany svg.png JLD Motorsport Pierre Depault 2.71%
Flag of the United States svg.png Riverside Racing Julius Wood 2.41%
Flag of Australia svg.png Tassie Racing Academy Matthew Saoea 2.41%
Flag of Mars svg.png Johnny Cab Racing Vilos Cohaagen 2.12%
Flag of Jamaica svg.png Sanka Sports Sanka Coffie 1.04%
Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Aston Martin Racing Brett Johnson 0.46%

Previous Teams

Team Owner
Flag of France svg.png Alstom GPE Jean-Francois Voeckler
Flag of Spain svg.png Escalona Racing Inigo Escalona
Flag of Japan svg.png Ocean Motorsport Technology Yusaku Higashiyama

Voting Process

A unique draw-card for Formula Community is that almost every aspect of the competition has been decided by voting. As each team's voting power is dependent on the share owned of the competition, it is not necessarily number of votes that decides each ballot. For a decision to be made, a >50% majority must be achieved (unless down to two options), meaning that if no option has a majority second preferences come into play.

Issue 1 - Location of Series

Teams voted on which continent to base the series, although the decision did not preclude races from being held on other continents, if voted on later. The following options were available:

  • Europe
  • North America
  • Asia - including Australia and New Zealand
  • South America
  • Africa

Asia took an early lead following the first round of voting, but did not achieve the required majority. As North America, South America and Africa did not have the required votes to achieve a majority, they were eliminated from the voting process and the second round began. In a surprising turnaround, it was Europe that took some late preferences to edge out Asia.

Option Votes
Round 1 Round 2
Europe 29.50% 52.09%
Asia 38.95% 47.92%
North America 15.76%
Africa 8.14%
South America 7.22%

Issue 2 - Type of Vehicles

Teams next voted on what vehicles would be raced in the series. Once again there were five options as follows:

  • Open Wheel
  • Touring Cars
  • GT Endurance
  • Motorcycles
  • Super Karts

Voting opened, not without some controversy as the Australian Racing Academy declared they would withdraw from the series if the motorcycles option was selected. This was then followed by German team Renntechnologie GmbH attempting to auction off their vote to the highest bidder, a move that despite attracting several bids was denounced by many teams and led to Renntechnologie withdrawing their offer to sell their vote. Tassie Racing then attempted to change their vote, a move the Australian Racing Academy protested and sought clarification on the legality, with it later being ruled that vote-changing was not permitted.

Despite the string of controversy, Touring Cars took an early voting lead and never looked back, although it withstood a late charge from Super Karts in the second and third preferences.

Option Votes
Round 1 Round 2 Round 3
Touring Cars 40.14% 40.14% 44.62%
Super Karts 23.80% 28.62% 39.73%
Single Seaters 17.82% 17.82%
Motorcycles 4.82%
GT Endurance
Abstaining 12.04%

Issue 3 - Major Sponsor

This time there were six options for the major sponsor for the series. Each option had its own unique terms, benefits and pitfalls:

  • BMW - £4,000,000
    • Teams must run BMW 1 Series Sport Hatch
    • Must be at least two events in Germany
  • Nokian Tyres - £1,500,000 + free tyres to all teams for duration of series
    • All teams must run Nokian Tyres
    • There must be at least three ice/snow rounds, with one of these rounds in Finland
  • Castrol - £2,200,000
    • At least 50% of teams must run Castrol fuels
    • At least six academy drivers
    • Series must not be a spec or semi-spec series
  • MotorsTV - £0 + Free television coverage
  • Emirates - £1,000,000 + associated costs with hosting rounds in the Middle East
    • At least three rounds must be held in the Middle East, with one of those in Dubai
  • None

After some strong opinions raised between the teams, and an unprecedented four rounds of preference voting, it was Nokian Tyres that were decided on, and thus became the competition's major sponsor.

Option Votes
Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Round 4
Nokian Tyres 26.49% 32.87% 38.89% 47.03%
Castrol 21.67% 21.67% 24.08% 34.92%
Emirates 16.86% 16.86% 18.98%
BMW 10.55% 10.55%
MotorsTV 6.38%
None 6.02%
Abstaining 12.03% 18.05%

Issue 4 - Class of Touring Cars

Teams were next given the option on four types of touring cars to be raced:

  • S2000
  • Multi-Class Sports Cars
  • Silhouette Cars
  • GTC V8s

This issue produced some fairly close voting, but after GTC V8s and S2000 were knocked out and preferences counted Silhouette (tube-framed) cars was decided on!

Option Votes
Round 1 Round 2
Silhouette 33.99% 44.74%
MC Sports Cars 27.66% 37.06%
S2000 15.65%
GTC V8 4.73%
Abstaining 17.97%

Issue 5 - Vehicle Technical Regulations

Teams now were invited to vote on three issues at once, engines, driver aids and specification parts.

Engines

  • V8s
  • 1.6L Turbo Hybrids
  • Electric

Driver Aids

  • Open Driver Aids
  • Driver Aids Banned
  • Standardised Driver Aids

Specification Parts

  • Chassis only - all parts except chassis are open to change
  • Full Specification Parts - no parts open to change
  • Full Specification, minus engine - only engine open to change
  • Full Specification, minus aero - only aerodynamics open to change

Voting Results

On each issue the winning option generally won in dominant style, meaning some options were decided before all teams had even voted. By the end of the voting process it was decided that the vehicles would run 1.6L Turbo Hybrid engines, with standardised driver aids and the vehicles would be full specification except for the engine.

Issue Outcome
Engines 1.6L Turbo Hybrids
Driver Aids Standardised Driver Aids
Specification Parts Full Specification minus engine

Issue 6 - Calendar

Teams were next invited to propose race tracks and calendars to make up the first season. With suggestions as diverse as Suzuka, Japan and Circuito de Pucarani, Bolivia, the decision was not going to be an easy one. In the end, four calendars were short-listed as follows, with suggestions from Auricom, RennTechnologie and El Cartel Suramerica making the final cut plus a combined calendar with the most popular suggestions of tracks collated.

Calendar Rounds
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Cost
Standard Calendar Flag of Spain svg.png Jerez Flag of Finland svg.png Ahvenisto Flag of Sweden svg.png Mantorp Flag of Germany svg.png Estering Flag of Italy svg.png Pergusa Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Lydden Hill Flag of France svg.png Pau Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Silverstone £2.75M1
Low Cost Calendar Flag of Sweden svg.png Mantorp Flag of Finland svg.png Tykkimaki Flag of Lithuania svg.png Nemuno Žiedas Flag of Poland svg.png Poznan Flag of Italy svg.png Pergusa Flag of France svg.png Ledenon Flag of Germany svg.png Estering Flag of Belgium svg.png Duivelsberg Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Angelsey £1.95M
Global Calendar Flag of Finland svg.png Ahvenisto Flag of Finland svg.png Tykkimaki Flag of France svg.png Pau Flag of Bolivia svg.png Pucarani Flag of Estonia svg.png Audru Ring Flag of Germany svg.png Estering Flag of Austria svg.png Red Bull Ring £2.2M
Combination Calendar Flag of Finland svg.png Ahvenisto Flag of Sweden svg.png Mantorp Flag of Germany svg.png Estering Flag of the United Kingdom svg.png Lydden Hill Flag of France svg.png Pau Flag of Italy svg.png Pergusa Flag of Poland svg.png Poznan Flag of Spain svg.png Jerez Flag of Austria svg.png Red Bull Ring £2.85M
  • 1 - The Standard Calendar includes a £10K tax for each team in order to secure the final round at Silverstone.

Auricom's Standard Calendar took a huge lead early on, but was only slightly short of the 50% majority required, meaning that the vote had to go to preferences once again. However it was a matter of par for the course and the Standard Calendar was decided on with 49.05% of the vote.

Option Votes
Round 1 Round 2
Standard Calendar 43.03% 49.05%
Combination Calendar 29.68% 31.80%
Low Cost Calendar 14.16%
Global Calendar 4.26%
Abstaining 8.70%

The result was controversial for a number of reasons, with some teams claiming that they were not aware a £10K tax would apply and that it should be voted on. The series promoter also made a snap decision to change the first round from Jerez to Moscow, with Equipe Gauthier paying the £100K difference. No official reason was given for the change, but it went largely unnoticed with more teams complaining about the tax. No official response was given for the tax either by the promoter, and teams eventually were distracted with the next issue - race format.

Issue 7 - Race Format

The promoter gave teams options on the race weekend format, with choices for the On-road and Off-road events.

On-road

  • Two Race Format - Qualifying session to determine grid for 100km race. Finishing positions of race determine grid for second race of 150km with top 10 positions reversed
  • Heat Races - All drivers participate in three short sprints with best drivers progressing to a final with the grid decided by heat results
  • Endurance Race - One 400km race with pit stops
  • Multiple Formats - Mix of formats throughout season

The On-road format was decided in just one round of voting, with 52.27% choosing the Two Race Format.

Option Votes
Two Race Format 52.27%
Multiple Formats 21.21%
Heat Races 12.04%
Endurance Race 9.63%
Abstaining 4.95%

Off-road

  • On-road Format - Same rules as On-road
  • Qualifying Races - Qualifying session followed by single medium length races with top drivers progressing to a final
  • Versus Format - Drivers race in groups of four with top two progressing to next stage until four left for a final

Unlike On-road, the Off-road format took two rounds of voting with the teams split fairly evenly across the three options, but preferences favoured the same format as On-road, and it was therefore chosen.

Option Votes
Round 1 Round 2
On-road Format 39.44% 48.83%
Versus Format 33.64% 33.64%
Qualifying Races 22.11%
Abstaining 4.81% 17.53%