WhiteBlue wrote:I do not mind that some people have no historic perspective, they are simply poorer for those deficits. For me F1 is only an extension of GP racing and it has been badly managed at times. Motor sport ethos has not seen its highest days under the guidance of Bernie Ecclestone and the way he has shaped the top racing fomula for show rather than sport. In my view the FiA has provided an invaluable corrective with the new formula. I'm immensely proud and very happy that Todt has almost single handedly achieved this paradigm shift.
WOW! MUCH SUPERIORITY! SUCH HISTORY! WOW! MUCH KNOW RACING!
I do not mind people who actually know better to pull a card like that, though the choice of words is a bit rude. But seriously, you are not in the position to do that
For starters, it's YOUR vision F1 is just like an extended GP series. It's quite clear it's not and that it has an unique and overlooking position on any other kind of motor racing. At least until it doesn't get killed. Only thing comparable is Le Mans, and that's quite some way away from simply GP racing
Then, your main argument is historic perspective. WTF you mean by history? Was it at any time the top priority to save fuel and be road relevant? Did F1 at any time shaped it's history according to social pressures or agendas? Except for now, no. Or at most it was limited to some minor aspects. It always aimed to be the fastest around a track and period. Glamour, the show and all that came as a result. The only time this took place is now. That means your vision of history is the poor as f*ck one actually
Plus, as inevitable when you are thinking politically when you shouldn't, you are contradicting yourself a lot. What we have now is nothing but aimed for the show, for the looks, the image and the secondary interests rather than sport. This kind of slowing down, limiting regulations that pleases MANUFACTURERS, locks innovation and make faux cost reductions (cheap for the big players, increasingly impossible for all the rest) was supported by the likes of Briatore. It caters for making it easier for the established teams by decreasing competition and opportunities of innovation so that there is not much effort going on. It changes the focus of sport and racing to "social issues", faking a necessity and making faux statements to the society, so that ACTUALLY it can serve PRIMARILY marketing interests and MAKING IT IMPOSSIBLE FOR OUTSIDERS. It's called diversion!
FIA now wants to pull a WRC on F1. They will use as many "socially relevant/pleasant to the general public" excuses as necessary to secure the category to 2 ou 3 main players. That means easing it for the players by making rules suited to them, while making it harder for the others with the excuse of making it easier, cheaper and greener for everyone
You make it so that your technical regulation suits perfectly the structure of the "chosen" teams, their technical and production abilities and their marketing needs. This regulation is obviously cheaper FOR THEM, as they have all the tools to comply to it (like huge factories/know how that already know hybrids) and the marketing return for that specific image they will portray is big and guaranteed. It also can be sold as green, because no average Joe will think about development costs, battery costs or how irrelevant that is. Being "green", it gains social support and makes it LOOK like it's a good intentioned regulation (instead of the actual lobby driven, anti sport interest)
The other teams have to comply with it as if they were going to be benefited, but in reality the rules are out of their reach (Cosworth comes to mind), end up being MORE EXPENSIVE because they have to outsource and buy more complex technology at higher costs and has ZERO RETURN to them. Who cares if Sauber has a fuel saving engine? People and sponsors only come to them for the racing and for track results. Marketing and commercially wise, they can't profit over that. Unlike the chosen teams, who can sell cars and engines and so can profit on this technology and the marketing that goes along
Rules are locked out so that no one can find innovative ways out of it, guaranteeing the good results for the chosen teams and limiting expenditure FOR THEM (they don't have to spend millions on a possible loop hole or innovation). You also make it so that the technical rules benefit maximizing the dominance of those teams, both by making them impossible to different teams to catch up and by making them privilege "naturally" savings of parts (limiting the ERS comes to mind, as well as the fuel flow). That is so that THOSE TEAMS have less expenditure and an easier time competing, after all it's not really about the sport anymore
WRC did this by first cutting "expensive" races. Some of them very traditional and high audience ones. If it didn't lined FIAs pocket, it went out. Cost cutting was the excuse. Then they changed technical rules that benefited the main players (Citroen and Ford) and made others get behind and leave (Subaru and Mitsubishi), in the name of "cost cutting" again. Then they cut tires suppliers to Pirelli monopoly, starting the process of reducing costs and easing up FOR THE 2 CHOSEN TEAMS. Marketing interest in WRC felt, as one of the main sponsors couldn't be there anymore (Michelin) and the other (Pirelli) didn't need to invest anything. Less money to other teams in the end, less costs but much less marketing opportunities and financial return
By that time only 3 manufacturers were officially involved at WRC and newcomers quickly left, even if reasonably successful. Final blow: mandate "downsized" cars in the name of being "green" that also must be homologated at the start of the season and not changed during it (to "reduce costs"). Most companies don't have cars that size that are interesting to display as a marketing tool at all, or are too weak to provide a good basis for a race car. Some don't even have them at all on their lineup (Subaru and Mistubishi). Citroen on the other hand has a perfect car for that purpouse and profits much more marketing it than a mid sized model. Ford has a similar situation. VW can afford being the new kid on an unwelcomed place, every other one is OUT. AND NO ONE WANTS TO GET IN
The homologation makes it so that the only 2 companies being actually good to win races guarantee no one has a chance, and they save a lot by not having to develop the cars. LITERALLY NO ONE ELSE CAN OR WANTS TO COMPETE
Do you consider this sport over the show? Really? That is "good management"? Will F1 follow WRC and become a Mercedes/Renault playground with maybe only 4 teams being ANY good? Let's remember the gap to the midfield INCREASED this year. Merc can open 5 seconds a lap to a midfield team if they want now
WhiteBlue wrote:So why don't we all sit back and try to enjoy the show?
The show is so bad. If it wasn't for Bottas crashing and having to take positions back, the race would have been extremely boring. Saving too much fuel (irony, having to save further fuel on a fuel efficient engine) and the lack of good sound made it average. The only good part of the new formula is the lesser downforce, but lack of a proper engine and maybe better tires killed it. When drivers and teams learn how to tame the extra low RPM force, there will be zero fun left
And let me assure you: pro drivers will adapt to even the most extreme circumstances given practice. Maybe they won't be breaking time records, but won't be sliding all over the place like not very good amateurs like now
Vettel Maggot wrote:
Oh dear God, where to start?
Your not a politician are you?
If he (or she, don't know) isn't, he sure has the soul of one
Jersey Tom wrote:Did F1 need a greener engine formula? No, absolutely not. IMO that they sell it as such is almost patronizing.
Perfect word choice. Then again, we are in quite a patronizing stage at humanity and governments. In Europe it's the newest "cool" trend for instance, I will not even bother to explain so I don't derail the topic. The sport being eurocentric, I guess that had quite an influence
xpensive wrote:WhiteBlue wrote:
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As an engineer I'm not at all interested in the sterile years since the last turbo era.
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Well, engineers come in all shapes and forms, don't they?
Classy as always xpensive!
I've been censored by a moderation team that rather see people dying and being shot at terrorist attacks than allowing people to speak the truth. That's racist apparently.
God made Trump win for a reason.