Just came across this from Toto Wolf and it all sounds very positive to me:
http://m.autosport.com/news/report.php/ ... ate-errors
But equally I don't know the specifics so any clarification would be great

bhall II wrote:I think I've finally figured out how the regulations are devised.
Ideas for rules are written down on small notecards. The cards are then pinned to the walls of a small room. An autistic chimpanzee with stomach flu is led into that room and encouraged to randomly fling poo against the walls. The shittiest ideas are the ones that get codified to govern the sport.
In a series where the whole idea behind development is to make the cars faster and easier to drive, radio restrictions are senseless.
Are you serious? What kind of dumbass thought of this? The teams can see if the car will destroy itself quite a bit sooner than the driver that has a million other things to deal with. But no, you must not tell him it's about to hit the fan and that it's best to stop somewhere safe and not kill the car and put someone in danger perhaps.10. You may not tell the driver to turn off the car.
All from a sport that no longer allows helmet livery changes, because fans are apparently confused by different colors.ARF1 wrote:...qualifying more complicated, radio messages more complicated, change launch procedures, change DRS zone lengths, change minimum tyre pressures, change wastegate pipes etc.
motogp.com wrote:Jorge Lorenzo produces the fastest ever lap by a motorcycle around the Circuito de Jerez to take his first pole of the [2015] season.
Formula 1, on the other hand, can be as much as 10s off the pace set by cars a decade ago.motogp.com wrote:Marquez sets fastest ever recorded speed in MotoGP™ during the [2015] Commercial Bank Grand Prix of Qatar, 350.5kph (217.79mph) as he finishes 5th.
I think there are a lot of people - former drivers included - who feel as if the driver had a bigger input when he wasn't so guided over the radio.bhall II wrote: F1 is not now, nor has it ever been, a driver's Championship .
So from what I can find, fastest ever qualifying lap at Melbourne is 1:23.919 by Vettel in 2010 (albeit Michael's in race lap record from 2004 is 1:24.125 so he could have gone faster if they'd qualified on low fuel in those days).bhall II wrote: Formula 1, on the other hand, can be as much as 10s off the pace set by cars a decade ago.
From pitboards to radios to advanced telemetry, teams have always imparted to their drivers as much information as possible within the constraints of the technology available to them at the time. It was never an issue until last season.f1316 wrote:I think there are a lot of people - former drivers included - who feel as if the driver had a bigger input when he wasn't so guided over the radio.