@theSuit: you are my kind of guy! I was feeling lonely. I thought I was the only one capable of posting TWO full pages in one reply...
I should have mentioned the list of ideas that have sprung in this forum, because they are basically what you say:
- The
"track-not-modernized-while-cars-are" issue has been over commented by some people in this forum: me.
Now they can make jokes on both of us.
- The qualy... well, what can I say. I won't touch it with a 3 feet pole. We had several nightmarish years about it. It is like your mother-in-law: you better do not disturb her. I loved one lap qualy. Montoya almost broke records then... sigh.
- I have a particular ability to find NASCAR interesting. Most of you have seen me recommending
Social Science at 190 MPH on NASCAR's Biggest Superspeedways: they argue that NASCAR shows you how life was before the computer arrived... pure nostalgia. However, yes, it is a left turn monstrosity. I love it, ugly and all. You know, F1 is not the only sport where the equipment matters: I have raced horses (twice!). I would say NASCAR is like having only mules to race: equipment matters less. The problem in F1 is that money is singing loud right now. Some of the horses have eight legs... A money cap on the sport would be hard to implement now, but, hey, Williams is going to disappear at this rate.
There are other ideas posted elsewhere: fuel restriction, harder tires and maybe more teams. Oh, and don't forget the push-to-pass button.
Anyway, now that car-makers have a strong saying in F1, I am afraid cars will be more "normalized". If you do not do it, we all we had left in a few years will be Toyota, Honda, BMW, Mercedes, Ferrari/FIAT and, maybe, McLaren (english automakers seem destroyed or buyed out, maybe McLaren can be bought by Mercedes?).
Finally, the truth is that you do not need F1 budget to get F1 speeds: at the last French GP, the last F1 car only had an 8 seconds advantage over the best GP2 car.