
WhiteBlue, Timbo and Pup are right on. And you are more intelligent than your long post suggests. It was disappointing to see you chanting the stale old anti-Ferrari mantra.timbo wrote:That way they should hail Toyota's exit. Are you expecting any of new teams to be tougher competition to Ferrari than Toyota on track?WhiteBlue wrote:The explanation for Ferrari's opposition to new teams sounds somewhat lame. Ferrari do not want to compete the hard way but by every cheat or secret vetoed rule they can get. So the FIA is well advised to kepp filling the grid with independant teams and make sure they have an independant engine supply. It looks like this is developing rather nicely.
I think the problem with that is that the numbers aren't working now for CVC, even with 50%. The debt is too high, and its growing year by year.WhiteBlue wrote:Saward certainly picked up some interesting points there. It is logical that the FIA and FOTA share an interest in cutting CVC's share of the FOM profits. Fifty percent sounds pretty outrageous. 15 looks nicer indeed.
I agree. LMP is a killer series. The problems with LMP though are 1) there are too few races, and 2) an endurance series will never be able to match the popularity of something like F1. Not enough people have the patience for a 5-hour race. My ideal series would be a combination of F1 and LMP. Running 15-20 races, primarily F1 length on classic F1 courses, but with 5 or so endurance races thrown into the mix, including LeMans and Daytona. The cars would be a mix of open wheel and prototype, similar to the Sigma F1 concept (that you guys are probably tired of hearing me talk aboutgcdugas wrote:F1 is sadly killing all its claim to technology with specs that regulate 99% of the car. LMP is rightfully the new home of automotive technologies. F1 is losing the plot because of Bernie’s greed and Max’s power lust.
Well, I already let all of you know it. Maybe you don't mind, but certainly we at F1Tech do: it's not about us, it's about the site.Pup wrote:I don't mind WB's quips, Ciro. You well know that I've been known to encourage them at times.I'll count on you to let us know when our exchanges start to spoil the atmosphere of the place.
Nice place, btw.
Good policy. You can also plant flowers. Just an idea.Ciro Pabón wrote:If you are not aware of my little campaign for an attractive forum, here it is: it's perfectly right to say that a post is idiotic but not that the poster is an idiot.
My agent will contact you for a cut of the ad revenue. These posts take time, you know.Ciro Pabón wrote:I'm glad you like the site and I truly hope you participate frequently: the caliber of arguments between people like WhiteBlue and yourself is outstanding and a reason for the site's high number of hits I'm witnessing.
That is a really good idea, to be honest i've acutally preferred watching sports prototypes to F1 recently. It's not just from a technical interest point of view, F1 has had too much bullshit and politicking lately.Pup wrote: I agree. LMP is a killer series. The problems with LMP though are 1) there are too few races, and 2) an endurance series will never be able to match the popularity of something like F1. Not enough people have the patience for a 5-hour race. My ideal series would be a combination of F1 and LMP. Running 15-20 races, primarily F1 length on classic F1 courses, but with 5 or so endurance races thrown into the mix, including LeMans and Daytona. The cars would be a mix of open wheel and prototype, similar to the Sigma F1 concept (that you guys are probably tired of hearing me talk about).
gcdugas wrote:F1 is sadly killing all its claim to technology with specs that regulate 99% of the car. LMP is rightfully the new home of automotive technologies. F1 is losing the plot because of Bernie’s greed and Max’s power lust.
Lets ask ourselves an honest question. It pertains directly to the health af F1 and this thread. What gives a manufacturer a greater boost, winning LeMans or winning any GP (pick one, Monaco, Spa, Suzuka, Silverstone etc.)? It doesn't even matter if zero fans tune in their TVs to watch it or not. Right now LeMans carries much more prestige, cache, elan etc. in the hearts and minds of the public and it carries much more weight as a technical challenge in their minds as well. Hence it will soon be the new home of the manufacturers in their flight from the F1 spec racer series. The manufacturers need a place to race their concepts and innovations. LMP is now that place.Pup wrote:I agree. LMP is a killer series. The problems with LMP though are 1) there are too few races, and 2) an endurance series will never be able to match the popularity of something like F1. Not enough people have the patience for a 5-hour race. My ideal series would be a combination of F1 and LMP. Running 15-20 races, primarily F1 length on classic F1 courses, but with 5 or so endurance races thrown into the mix, including LeMans and Daytona. The cars would be a mix of open wheel and prototype, similar to the Sigma F1 concept (that you guys are probably tired of hearing me talk about).
gcdugas wrote:gcdugas wrote:F1 is sadly killing all its claim to technology with specs that regulate 99% of the car. LMP is rightfully the new home of automotive technologies. F1 is losing the plot because of Bernie’s greed and Max’s power lust.Lets ask ourselves an honest question. It pertains directly to the health af F1 and this thread. What gives a manufacturer a greater boost, winning LeMans or winning any GP (pick one, Monaco, Spa, Suzuka, Silverstone etc.)? It doesn't even matter if zero fans tune in their TVs to watch it or not. Right now LeMans carries much more prestige, cache, elan etc. in the hearts and minds of the public and it carries much more weight as a technical challenge in their minds as well. Hence it will soon be the new home of the manufacturers in their flight from the F1 spec racer series. The manufacturers need a place to race their concepts and innovations. LMP is now that place.Pup wrote:I agree. LMP is a killer series. The problems with LMP though are 1) there are too few races, and 2) an endurance series will never be able to match the popularity of something like F1. Not enough people have the patience for a 5-hour race. My ideal series would be a combination of F1 and LMP. Running 15-20 races, primarily F1 length on classic F1 courses, but with 5 or so endurance races thrown into the mix, including LeMans and Daytona. The cars would be a mix of open wheel and prototype, similar to the Sigma F1 concept (that you guys are probably tired of hearing me talk about).
An honest evaluation of this is key for us to understand in view of the topic of this thread. It is like a run on a bank... first a few withdrawals, then a steady trickle, then the mass exodus. Right now, in the mind's of the general car buying public, F1 is seen as a corrupt rich-boy series full of lying scandals, unfettered greed, cheating, endless courtroom disputes, corporate power plays and tabloid dungeon whippings. It is not even perceived as full of glamour any more. The media spotlight has shifted from the glitter to the tawdry. The once "underbelly" is now the dominant image in the minds of the public.
And then there is what F1 is not.... F1 is no longer perceived to be the proving ground of new technology. This is because it has been ages since any road relevant technology has emigrated from F1 to a production car you can buy. LMP has made a big splash with the "eco-friendly" diesels. And you can buy a car with it today.
In my view F1 lost the essence of their technology orientation shortly after the FW13 and FW14 appeared in the early 90's. Rather than embracing a world of new electronic possibilities F1 shut down whole new areas of road relevant technologies. Electronic active suspension was banned, the CVT was preemptively banned in the prototype stage etc.
"Driver's aids" were shunned as "impure" but in reality they are not. ABS, TC and LC, fully auto gearboxes should be technically embraced. If you enter a corner too hot all the ABS in the world will not save you from a crash or blowing your line. If you exit too hot you will soon be on a less than optimal line with the TC cutting in at the limit of adhesion and taking away from your lap time. And then there is the steering, it is still verty possible to spin out a TC car by asking too much of the steering. It may plow off the track or loop out according to the balance of the car or according to the weight transfer incurred by the driver's technique. These "aids" will limit crashes for sure but to get the optimal lap time out of a fully "aided car" you have to have optimal braking point/weight transfer/apex clipping/exit line technique. There is as much skill in that as anything that lacks the "aids". The "aids" are just one more thing that the driver has to fully master. Shunning the "aids" was a PR coup from those who are overly nostalgic. In another era they would have similarly shunned "horseless carriages" because it did away with managing your animal's pace vs. endurance rather than seeing it as something else for humans to fully master.
These are things that can trickle from the F1 "proving grounds" to actual production cars in a relevant and quick way. F1's image as the "pinnacle of motorsports" would suitably and justifiably be enhanced. F1 had a chance with KERS to change all that but it was regulated to death from the start. It should have been unlimited and AWD should also be allowed for greater energy capture. (the front could be electric only. or not, let the best design win) Road cars of the future will have all these things and more. Don't fight "technical destiny". If they resist, then F1 will take a back seat to whichever racing series most prominently embraces these technologies and more.
F1 fans look down upon NASCAR for its stone-age push-rod engines, antiquated carburaters and spec car chassis but they somehow fail to see that F1 is going down the same stone-age road with std. ECUs, "frozen engines", "equivalent engines", spec this and spec that etc. Every rule limitation kills technological innovation and road relevance. Throw off the mechanical limits but greatly reduce wing sizes and outlaw carbon brakes. Get lap times from having no minimum weight, any size tire, any car width, any wheelbase, any engine configuration, and even unlimited engine capacity. A 1300 BHP 4L I6 may beat a thirsty 2000 BHP 5L V12, or a fuel sipping 900BHP 3L V8 may be 25 Kmph slower on the straights but more nimble in the corners and lighter because of less fuel enough to turn a quicker lap. No limits does not mean insane lap times if the wings (road relevance please?) are reduced 75%. Lap times could be managed so they are roughly what they are today but instead of 4.5G cornering you may have only 2.8G cornering but you would regularly see 360-400 Kmph of the straights (much safer than 4.5G cornering BTW) and with carbon brakes outlawed ceramics would be developed (a road relevant technology) and there would still be greater passing due to increased braking distances.
Who cares about double diffusers and aero wheel shrouds? The biggest difference the average person can see in the cars is that some have shark fins and some do not. F1 had the opportunity to contribute to real road cars in a meaningful way but instead the public now sees technological innovations arising from LMP cars. Open up the regs to embrace "technical destiny" or stay in the irrelevant stone-age while other series pass you by. Better yet, stay a step ahead of "technical destiny" by being the racing series from whence innovations originate.
My main gripe with ALMS coverage here is that they are really bad about covering just the P1 class and the GT2 leaders. No one else. The camera positions are set up way too long and low. All I see are advertisements on the side of the track and no in car, not to mention that the camera angles give absolutely zero sense of speed. You never get the felling that they are racing at high speed anymore Formula 1 is the same way. I really like the ALMS because to me it's way more road relevant than the joke that is KERS. But the coverage is horrible from a fans point of view. I have seen the cars from the angles they show because they are the very same as if you were at the track. I want to see in car views, or cameras hanging off the cars, something that shows me a view that isn't littered with ads. Until that gets better I think I'm going to boycott all racing on television. I'm tired of getting ads shoved down my throat for the entire race, I see that crap enough during my daily life.xxChrisxx wrote:That is a really good idea, to be honest i've acutally preferred watching sports prototypes to F1 recently. It's not just from a technical interest point of view, F1 has had too much bullshit and politicking lately.Pup wrote: I agree. LMP is a killer series. The problems with LMP though are 1) there are too few races, and 2) an endurance series will never be able to match the popularity of something like F1. Not enough people have the patience for a 5-hour race. My ideal series would be a combination of F1 and LMP. Running 15-20 races, primarily F1 length on classic F1 courses, but with 5 or so endurance races thrown into the mix, including LeMans and Daytona. The cars would be a mix of open wheel and prototype, similar to the Sigma F1 concept (that you guys are probably tired of hearing me talk about).
I'm going to admit something I never thought I would now. NASCAR is acutally a guity pleasure of mine.gcdugas wrote: F1 fans look down upon NASCAR for its stone-age push-rod engines, antiquated carburaters and spec car chassis but they somehow fail to see that F1 is going down the same stone-age road with std.
Don't think so. Here, in Brazil, neswpapers are not aware of the existance of LM or ALMS. Neither mainstream TV or Radio. That's available thru Speed cable channel and I'm happy when it's not on Spanish.gcdugas wrote: Lets ask ourselves an honest question. It pertains directly to the health af F1 and this thread. What gives a manufacturer a greater boost, winning LeMans or winning any GP (pick one, Monaco, Spa, Suzuka, Silverstone etc.)? It doesn't even matter if zero fans tune in their TVs to watch it or not. Right now LeMans carries much more prestige, cache, elan etc. in the hearts and minds of the public and it carries much more weight as a technical challenge in their minds as well. Hence it will soon be the new home of the manufacturers in their flight from the F1 spec racer series. The manufacturers need a place to race their concepts and innovations. LMP is now that place.