GitanesBlondes wrote:As far as I am concerned, F1 stopped being a relevant technological breeding ground when it turned into the Bernie and Max show.
Seriously, consider when F1 began to stagnate from a technical perspective first - 1998 with the introduction of the narrow track cars riding on 3-grooved tires...
I would argue that this actually started sometime in the late 70s or early 80s, by which time everybody had more or less gravitated towards the same basic configuration.
GitanesBlondes wrote:The way I look at it is, if green engines were needed, the engine regulations should have been left open all these years as we likely would have seen the value of pursuing engine configurations beyond the V10 powerplants.
But it's not needed, at least not for grand prix racing, though endurance racing is another story.
GitanesBlondes wrote:No, this is all a marketing con job that has nothing to do with the fans, and never did. F1 is one of the most amazing sports because of how little fan input even matters any longer. Sure the teams go through all of the hoops with social media marketing, but when it comes to the actual rules, the FIA gives not one crap about the fans. Todt is proving to be quite as useless as his predecessor did.
And yet, the model works because people still pay to watch the races.
GitanesBlondes wrote:The rules work best in F1 when ideas are allowed to blossom, not when they are continually stifled year after year. The best rules also engage the fans' imagination, as well as stimulate the visceral experience of attending a grand prix. Stifling the rules just results in the same tired formula where refining what exists is the only key to success, and to refine it requires ungodly sums of money.
That's why the proposed budget cap is a sham, because it still doesn't address the issue that the best ideas come from creativity, and do not cost a penny to think up.
First, the best ideas may not cost a penny to think up, but they will cost a penny to validate, manufacture and refine.
Second, I'm not so sure about what you're saying. When you open up the rules, it could just become a matter of who has the most money, who can hire the most engineers, etc. because, as always, you know that there are, say, 20 things you know you can do to make your car faster, but you only have the time/money to pursue, maybe 10 of those items, and the engineering challenge is to choose which ones offer you the most improvement for the time/money spent. If you open the ruleset, then it becomes maybe 200 things, of which you can still pursue only 10. But the bigger, richer teams will be able to pursue more. Except now, these things may be worth not .2 or .3 of a second, but 1 or 2 seconds. It may just end up increasing the gap between the top teams and the midfield.
And it's not like a small team can just come up with a clever idea and run away with the championship, because the big teams are likely to immediately copy it and have the same thing on their car in a few months at most, and then your advantage is gone. An open formula may well turn out to work much better in the good old days when the largest teams did not have such large budgets.
GitanesBlondes wrote:Green F1 engines are an exercise in pissing money away with no real benefit to anyone on this planet.
Absolutely. The money spent on the development of these engines could have been better spent if your goal is to reduce CO2 emissions.
GitanesBlondes wrote:As that the great quote goes, "there's a sucker born every minute"...and the fans, media, and sponsors, are the suckers here.
So what does that make us?