WhiteBlue wrote:[...]
So if homologation is necessary for cost limitation it should be applied to both [engine and chassis].
[...]
All credit is due to Mercedes for engineering the best PU in F1 this year. But, the in-season freeze on PU updates means their leading position is practically unassailable, which means the rest of the Championship is likely to be incredibly boring. I don't see how a similarly entrenched chassis advantage for one team, the inevitable result of any homologation scheme, will produce anything but a similar outcome.
In my view, homologation largely relegates the competitive process to the offseason, where it cannot be seen, and that's boring. This latest iteration also does very little to control costs, as you can rest assured all manufacturers are feverishly spending money to update their PUs for next year.
As always, the only viable way to reduce costs is to completely standardize components. That way there's little scope for development costs and no single team is afforded a terminal advantage. But - and this is
highly important - I think such a scenario cuts against very grain of Formula One and should be avoided, regardless of the collateral damage to lesser funded teams. There are plenty of outlets for motor racing for those with limited means.
And just to steer this a bit more on-topic, standardization is also inherently slow. This is easily seen in any comparison of a spec-series versus a more deregulated counterpart. Hell, just look at the effect even limited standardization and homologation has had on F1 over the last ten years. Performance is now a shell of itself.