bhallg2k wrote:The teams aren't given a chassis by the FIA. Nor are they given a suspension, wings, engine or any other component of the car, save for the standard ECU - which, by the way, I'm also against. Instead, they're given a set of regulations from which the challenge is to build the fastest car they're capable of building.
Actually the rules are so restrictive in places that they're not far off being given many other components by the FIA. The materials that can be used are restricted, the design is expressly restricted for many components (dimensions are dictated, the layout or number of components, positions, weights, etc.). Ever wondered why the cars all look so alike?
The standard ECU is a necessity to ensure that artificial driver aids aren't introduced such as traction control. It's been one of the best things to happen to the sport over the last few years.
bhallg2k wrote:On the other hand, they are given tires. In the last ten years, we've seen tires constructed for performance (Bridgestone vs. Michelin), we've seen tires constructed for performance and durability (Bridgestone vs. Michelin, 2005), and we've seen tires built for outright durability (Bridgestone, 2007-2010). Now we have tires presented for the expressed purpose of being a wild card. That's it. There's no other rhyme or reason for the Pirelli-spec tires.
The tyres aren't designed to be wild cards, they're designed to be difficult but NOT impossible to work with. By the end of this season I would put money on there being more than one team that have a complete handle on the tyres and can get good life and pace out of them at pretty much every circuit.
We saw that last year where to begin with everyone was bitching about the tyre life, but by the end of the year we were back to boring and predictable races as the teams had completely adapted to the tyres.
bhallg2k wrote:The reason for this is because, frankly, the regulations are lazy. The focus on cost-cutting and restricting aerodynamic research* has created a formula that produces virtually identical cars that make for dull racing. On top of that, whatever gray areas left behind with room for innovation are closed just as soon as they're exploited. This is short-sighted, and it ignores reality.
The rules limit innovation across the board but it's not about cost cutting or laziness. It's because otherwise the cars would be too fast - too fast to be safe and too fast for humans to be able to drive them. Can you imagine how fast the cars would be if there was no restriction on the aerodynamics, engine, gearbox, tyres and suspension at all?
bhallg2k wrote:I refuse to believe that a species responsible for putting a man on the moon - shut up, x - is incapable of devising sensible and innovative regulations for racing cars that embrace the realities of the times in which we live and take into consideration where we seem to be heading, all without forgetting where we've been. Though that particular question is perhaps too big for this thread, at some point F1's viability will rely upon the answer. It's certainly not as grandiose as it may seem.
That's what they're trying to do in 2014. By limiting fuel flow they can force teams to limit the drag of the cars which in turn will limit the downforce. If the lap times / cornering speed gets too high then they'll just reduce the fuel flow limit a little more. If they get this right then we should hopefully see a relaxation of many of the rules which in turn will lead to greater variety up and down the pit lane. I doubt this will actually lead to better racing though, more likely one or two teams will get it right and will dominate the series for several seasons at a time.
bhallg2k wrote:These tires are just another way of putting off that discussion. They're a distraction, an obfuscation of reality.
They're a stop gap whilst major changes are made to the rules. Or do you think these things can be changed over night?
bhallg2k wrote:And they're artificial as hell.
No more so than any other aspect of the series. If it's about drivers then anything other than a spec series is artificial, and if it's about the car then anything other than an unrestricted series is artificial.