Well Ecclestone has been on record many times as saying he is perfectly happy to only have 10 teams on the grid since that is all that gets paid out for the constructor's championship, having an extra team or three now means he has to get into the bailout business when they are hemmorhaging money, which cuts down on the CVC profits. He did back off of that with his statement about being ok with 13 teams all of a sudden, but that's more because he knows at least Caterham is on their way out, and there is no threat of having a full 13 teams.
In any event. This may be exactly what you say...yet I can't help but think that you could wind up with the top teams telling Ecclestone and Todt to f*ck off on this one since being forced to use a homologated FIA-spec active suspension is just one less thing to engineer. Funny thing is that in 2015 this is the direction IndyCar is going in...
http://www.indycar.com/News/2013/12/12- ... -aero-kits
They are loosening up some aspects of their spec-series.
I do get the overall attraction of customer cars, and all the things that come with it, but when customer cars were prevalent in F1 during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, the sport was so much different from what it was now. The cost to play was still high, but not relative to what it is now. Of course that was because aerodynamics were still very much low-cost, and you were employing a very small staff.
On the flipside, I will sing to my grave that the CART/IRL/Tony George debacle is a tremendous lesson to be learned from, and a path that should be avoided at all costs. I'm just amazed that while not identical, F1 is venturing down a not too dissimilar path. Open-wheel racing in America still has not recovered from that whole thing, and they were very much in the position F1 is where no one thought the whole thing could be destroyed with a bunch of bone-headed, short-term decisions. It's hard to believe that they were positioned to displace F1 only 20 years ago.
If the active suspension proposal has been brought up as another foolish way to try and cap costs to appease the 6 lower teams that are screaming, then it's going to be interesting to see what the top teams including Ferrari have to say about it. Of course one can't help but get the feeling that someone is maneuvering for their own personal benefit and a potential split is being eyed with "escalating costs" being the defining factor...even though it will just enrich someone at the end of the day.