Seems like a drop in the ocean doesn't it?Red Bull (650 points) $4.400 million
McLaren (497 points) $2.985 million
Ferrari (375 points) $2.375 million
Mercedes (165 points) $1.325 million
Lotus (73 points) $865,000
Force India (69 points) $845,000
Sauber (44 points) $720,000
Toro Rosso (41 points) $705,000
Williams (5 points) $525,000
Caterham (0 points) $500,000
HRT (0 points) $500,000
Marussia (0 points) $500,000
Go back 5 years and apply the same logic.Cam wrote:I want what I paid for. I want what's on the box, not the $hite inside it.
Who's not trumpeting Mercedes? I have. Full credit. They didn't compete for 2 years to concentrate on 2014. Awesome. And that's what the sport has come to - teams basically stop competing for years while they 're-build' to tackle a year off in the future.
So we end up having one team who dominates thanks to a 2 year head start, while every other team can't develop to catch up.
What's not to love?
Pretty sure Bernie has that exit sown tight. Ferrari tried this strategy not too long ago and came up a cropper.SectorOne wrote:Could a breakaway series now even happen with the teams having signed the Concorde agreement that runs until 2020?
Please note how EBD, "flexy bits", engine maps and "various ducts" were all Red bull innovations that took months and years for other teams to implement. In total it was a 4 year domination streak which engine companies had their hands tied to compete.Cam wrote:Because I think you're wrong (which I've called you on before). The last 5 years had more scope to improve performance and gain an edge than we have now. With all the engines relatively stable, gains were made in ways that were easier to apply - and anyone could. Any team could have come up with the Double Diffuser. That some didn't wasn't a reflection of the rules, but a reflection of the oversight at the teams that missed that opportunity. The same could be said for the EBD, Engine Maps, Exhaust Blowing, Flexy bits, Various Ducts etc - all those solutions were available in the regs to any team that discovered them and implemented them.
There is no way, with this engine formula, that the same can be said. If you disagree, I'm all ears.
Not all. Why would you say that when the evidence proves otherwise? DD was Brawn, F-Duct was McLaren, W-Duct was Mercedes, Passive DRS (lotus I think?), etc, sure Red Bull had some innovations, but the point was (and still is) that ANY team could have developed those at ANY time, under the regs.FoxHound wrote:Please note how EBD, "flexy bits", engine maps and "various ducts" were all Red bull innovations that took months and years for other teams to implement. In total it was a 4 year domination streak which engine companies had their hands tied to compete.
You have had 7 races and you are calling for rule implementation on engines what engine people have been calling for on aero.
Seems biased in my view. But hey, its only my view right?
Cam wrote:Horner can manage anything ...
At no point did I admit any such thing.Cam wrote:At least you admit being bias. There's pretty much no further need to discuss. As the saying goes "you can lead a horse to water, but you cannot make him drink".
Try being impartial sometimes, you learn more.
If it's an english misinterpretation - I accept that. It was read as though you gave a bias argument.FoxHound wrote:Hence why I level my bias argument to you.
FH, I feel like I'm talking to brick wall, but I'm a communicator, so in that vain, I'll attempt another way to get the point across.FoxHound wrote:I want to know why, specifically in relation to the previous 4 years.
Precisely.hollus wrote:But that happens in all sports! Football teams, basketball teams, often win by spending more than their year budget in players for a championship run, winning for a while, and then find themselves in debt and with old players. Then they spend 5 years selling, buying youngsters and saving money. Lather, rinse, repeat.
If F1 is a sport, it will look like that.
Unbelivable Cam, truly.Cam wrote:FH, I feel like I'm.......struggling to even make the distance.
If you need to focus on Australia to say electric vehicles are of very little benefit, then you´re proving me right, even in the worse example you´ve find electric vehicles are still beneficial. Anycase, the planet bothers about the average, not about some example, good or bad, and taking the average EV´s pollute just a fraction of ICE, and the difference will continue raising each yearCold Fussion wrote:That may be true for some countries, but take for Instance Australia, 70% of the power produced is via coal, so replacing all the cars on the road currently with electric vehicles is of very little benefit. On a side note, I don't like how hydro power is described as 'clean' energy, because it comes with the cost of massive environmental destruction, hopefully one day we wont need to build them and can get 'clean' power else where.Andres125sx wrote:So if they improve the emissions but not erradicate them completely, they´re not goodCold Fussion wrote:Even then, unless we move to completely green energy production we are no better off.![]()
There are tons of biased articles stating electricity pollutes as much as petrol.... but they "curiously" ignore that´s only when comparing electricity from coal plants. Reality is electriciy comes from different plants, coal (most polluting), nuclear (no emissions but harmful wastes), hydroelectric (no emissions), windmills (no emissions), solar plants (no emissions)... so actually electricity pollutes just a fraction of ICEs today, and the difference is higher each year