Il Leone wrote: ↑14 Mar 2024, 15:18
Could we entertain the idea of reverse grids?
In Sprint Races that would be fun, just use the reverse of qualifying positions for the Grand Prix.
As for the title question, "How to fix F1?" It's not broken. There is nothing to fix.
It would be nice if there was no DRS, wailing NA engines, less reliance on dodgy Middle Eastern events, less night & street races, but these are mere niceties.
BOP would be the worst possible decision for F1, it would make it a farcical show like WEC and IMSA -- instead of the competition to build the best car or bike as Grand Prix car and bike racing should be (and sportscar prototype racing
should be too).
DChemTech wrote: ↑14 Mar 2024, 22:23
Brawn was an outlier. Which can happen after a reg change, but they were also quickly caught up by the big spenders (in contrast to MB in 2014, which was a big spender itself).
The Brawn (Honda) was
the single most expensive Grand Prix car of all time, it itself
was the big spender, no?
It was designed with three wind tunnels in England and Japan, and almost unlimited development budget. There were even developments like an ultra compact differential designed by Honda in Japan that did not go on the car in the end.
Other teams like Toyota and Williams had the outwash front wing + double diffuser too, but they hadn't developed it to the same level as the big spender Honda car. Dernie suggested the outwash front wing to Toyota as a Toyota consultant, but it only ended up in the development program there relatively late so Toyota's outwash front wing wasn't as advanced as Honda's one.
Obviously with no development budget in 2009, it did not stay in front, but as the Honda team instead of the Brawn team in 2009 it potentially could have.
DChemTech wrote: ↑14 Mar 2024, 15:55
There is absolutely no evidence that the budget cap makes catch-up impossible.
Precisely. Aston Martin improved by 3s/lap from 2022 to 2023. McLaren improved by 3s/lap from mid-2022 to mid-2023.
Making huge gains of lap time is
absolutely possible under the budget cap.
Scuderia Ferrari and Mercedes GP were and are on the "backfoot" (comparatively) only because they made
almost no improvement at all from their late 2022 car to their 2023 launch cars. This is borne out in how they both won less races in 2023 than 2022, instead of the same or more number of races as you would expect with usual improvements.
After all, the Ferrari was
THE fastest car at the start of the 2022 regulations for crying out loud. Instead of extending that lead as you would expect, they now find themselves in a position of needing to "catch up", but that's
NOT the sporting regulations fault!