andrew wrote:Well you just came accorss as a total jerk. That sort of attitude belongs on idiot sites like crash.net.
And here you continue that tradition of cluelessness and add insult to your repertoir. Remarkably bolt for a rookie with 10 posts. Most of your points have nothing to do with the quality of racing as I can show you:
andrew wrote:Max Mosley wanted a budget cap, he wanted new teams to enter with Cosworth engines, he wanted no refueling, he wanted engines to last several races, in short he devised the rules which have killed the racing. He also allowed the double diffuser which makes the air behind a car so turbulent that it'll severely hinder the following car and wreck the following cars tyres.
Budget cap has no impact on the quality of racing except maybe we would promote ingenuity over resources which would spice up the show. The racing in the 50ties, 60ties, 70ties and 80ties were done on much lower budgets than the proposed and were often thrilling. The arguments against the budget cap were a difficulty of policing it, the interest of the top teams to maintain their power base and the social aspect of a quick reduction of work forces. Racing was never an argument by the contra proponents.
The Cosworth engines are simply an insurance for the continuity of F1 if even more manufacturers leave F1. Williams have raced it quite respectably compared to their Toyota power last season. It cannot be shown to have a negative impact on racing.
Multi race engines and gearboxes are no impediment to thrilling races as the two last seasons have shown.
The refuelling ban proposal did not come from Max but is an original FOTA cost cutting proposal which was first genuinely proposed by David Coulthard in his ITV column in 2008.
David Coulthard wrote:“From my point of view a bigger drawback of refuelling is that it detracts from the racing by turning the grand prix into a series of low-fuel sprints between pit stops. In the days (pre-1994) when you carried your entire race fuel load on board the car, there was a much bigger role for the driver in managing the tyres and brakes. These days, in dry conditions, you very rarely see anyone win from further back than the second row of the grid, because race pace largely mirrors qualifying pace – which is not surprising when the conditions are so similar.”
The double diffusor is a result of a loop hole in the 2009 rules which were proposed by the OWG and decided by the teams voting. Mosley wanted a fixed downforce limit of 1,25 metric tons which was opposed by the teams. The ruling on the double diffusor was not done by Mosley but by the judges of the ICA who are independent from the president of the FiA.
You can see that you got each point absolutely wrong. This why I told you that you have no clue. Obviously you listen only to popular myths that are distributed by people with an anti FiA agenda.