Not inducing that you are responsible for making a formula that pleases everyoneAndres125sx wrote:Do you know in the 80´s drivers also needed to care about fuel? That´s a turbo problem, you can use as much as you can (with some limits obviously, but never reached in race config)
It´s not me who criticize F1 everyday (sound, greeness, tires...), so it´s not me who should do a formula that pleases everyone![]()
I accept what it is, would love to improve it many ways, but hey, nothing is perfect. MotoGP should have more top teams fighting for the championship, not just two. WRC is awesome but too difficult to follow, Nascar is very competitive but I find it boring without corners or braking points....
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You do have a point. Many motorsports categories have saving fuel as an important part (or even saving the car itself). F1 though, has reached a point were most of the race you are saving fuel and the cars go simply too slow. Someone made the maths here, in saving fuel mode they go slower than GP2. That's visible from TV as well, you get the perception that they are taking so long to finish a lap. And that perception is true!
Thing is, F1 has made a formula where (in a previsible way) it pays to have an engine that cannot sustain anywhere near top performance always, but just for a few moments. You have potentially more performance than last year's V8s for some single crucial laps (like qualifying). After that, you absolutely have to save not only fuel but the equipment itself. Not a notch or two like it was, but several.
This makes saving fuel (actually, saving the engine as well) mandatory for the biggest part of the race. When they compete at near full performance for too long, the next race they have problems. And to save enough fuel it is necessary to slow down too much, as they are simply asking for too much to be saved from such high performance cars/engines.
In the 80s a fast lap was insane and during the race only those in knowledge would see they were saving fuel. WRC is difficult to follow because FIA managed to ruin it, just like F1. It is now a sport only aired in few paid channels and even so diminishing the TV coverage. I had 2 channels that aired WRC almost live, with great quality. Albeit paid...
Now those channels won't even make remarks of the results in their weekly reports. They were about sports in general, so you guess the situation is ugly when they tell you the results of some obscure Olympics game and not a single word on WRC. Back in 2004/2005/06 when WRC was challenging F1 views, they decided to make their own coverage worse and took other measures to limit audience. The next year Mitsubishi, Subaru and other main players retired as a consequence.
The rest is history. FIA made it into a marketing fest for the remaining two manufacturers and now no one really cares about it. The same downsizing, ecobullshit theme was used. The cars from inferior categories are now almost as fast, much funnier to watch and more competitive. FIA killed any intention of rally being a really serious sport, even the top one is speed limited and slow
That brings us back on topic. In WRC there was an imminent shakeup. Apart from Ford and Citroen (not even Peugeot anymore), no one is left there. VW came in but that's it. Others just vanished from the sport or run other categories that are less restrictive. Maybe restriction is the key thing.
If it keeps that way, F1 is probably gonna have an imminent shakeup as well. My prediction is Renault and Mercedes or Mercedes and Honda being the only ones left. Redbull, McLaren and Merecedes will be those remaining as teams, all others getting out or being costumers teams (like in WRC). Free TV coverage is to be doubted to continue.