Good points well made without any fanboy ying yang (that's a general point, I'm not singling you out!). Now we can have a discussion.WhiteBlue wrote:Well there is an important connection between the manufacturer pull out and the FIA plan to restrict F1 teams basically to the resources that can be paid out of the FOM money.richard_leeds wrote: So please leave the FIA/FOTA/Max/Bernie fanboy ying yang out of this. In the words of Bill Clinton - "Its the economy stupid".
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Hear. Hear...myurr wrote:For me the problem is not the cash - it's that F1 is not providing a reason for the teams to justify their participation. As it is F1 is all about marketing and brand awareness. Brilliant in times of bounty, but the marketing budgets are usually the first to be cut in a downturn. And how much prestige do teams like Toyota really get from their participation, where all we ever hear about is the huge amount they spend without getting results?
The reality is that F1 has been positioned and managed in such a way as to give the manufacturers little reason to stick around. It could even be argued that this has been deliberate - Max has been saying for a number of years now that the manufacturers couldn't be relied upon to stick around, and constantly adjusted the rules to make F1 more friendly for independents and less friendly for manufacturers. Some will say this was fabulous prediction on his part, but to me it's more about the remedy causing the original prediction to come true.
F1 needs to come up with a more attractive proposition, rather than continue down the path to becoming a spec series. My ideal solution would be to massively free up the rules, give teams a limited amount of fuel that has to last the race, standard tyres so as to manage and limit mechanical grip, and then say go forth and innovate. Some could go for a super low drag concept, with little drag but lots of power and straight line speed. Others may go high downforce but therefore lots of drag, and have to limit the engine power to make the fuel last. We could see unrestricted KERS/HERS, etc. Yes budgets would most likely balloon, but the teams would have the opportunity to invent, and some of that tech would be road relevant, and therefore their tech and expertise becomes a saleable commodity, even the smaller entrants would by necessity amass technical expertise that they would be able to resell to others.
I'm sure others will have other solutions, but the one thing F1 cannot escape is that people need a reason to go racing and rushing headlong into becoming a spec series will most likely take away the majority of the reasons.
Was this a prediction or a a consequence of his spec series?myurr wrote: Max has been saying for a number of years now that the manufacturers couldn't be relied upon to stick around, and constantly adjusted the rules to make F1 more friendly for independents and less friendly for manufacturers. Some will say this was fabulous prediction on his part, but to me it's more about the remedy causing the original prediction to come true.
Maybe not very soon, but who says your 'soon' is the same as mineautogyro wrote:My prediction for the future of road cars is electric vehicles through hybrid's.
If F1 does not folloew this direction it will be finished very soon.
If F1 doesn't lead, what's its purpose?RH1300S wrote: I also suspect that F1 will be smart enough to follow the market into these new technologies. It's a shame that it won't lead, but in truth it will probably follow the money, which in turn follows the market. Once it gets there it will push these technologies along very fast and probably market itself as a leader
If F1 follows then it is dead. Let road cars use electric and prototypes, trucks and trains use diesel.autogyro wrote:My prediction for the future of road cars is electric vehicles through hybrid's.
If F1 does not folloew this direction it will be finished very soon.
Correct me if I'm wrong here but I don't recall F1 inventing the Internal Combustion Engine...CMSMJ1 wrote:If F1 follows then it is dead. Let road cars use electric and prototypes, trucks and trains use diesel.autogyro wrote:My prediction for the future of road cars is electric vehicles through hybrid's.
If F1 does not folloew this direction it will be finished very soon.
F1 is nothing to do with car makers, their whims or follies. it is about engineering a car to go as fast as you can regardless of the costs.
If you overspend..you fail as a company and so you fail in F1.
it is a balance...right now the balance is coming back towards the garagistes.
To race????tarzoon wrote:If F1 doesn't lead, what's its purpose?