bhall wrote:Andres125sx wrote:[...]
If they would be doing 5 seconds faster laptimes, you´d be happy with this?. Real question here, please reply
I've never said frozen-spec V8s make any sense, only that V6T hybrids aren't the answer. They utilize off the shelf technologies so automakers can claim "road relevance" as if such a thing is actually meaningful.
And I agree with you that the lack of parity is an issue, but severely restricted testing and a seasonal PU freeze don't exactly help teams bridge the gap to the front, yanno? It could be even worse in coming years if certain teams get their
wish for mid-season chassis freezes.
As I've said elsewhere, this season effectively ended when Mercedes homologated its PU back in February. The grands prix are but a formality.
Maybe that wouldn't be so bad if the cars were a bit more entertaining in and of themselves. I'll never grow tired of watching or hearing stuff like
this (action starts at around 14:00, and the initial safety car period ends at around 25:00).
I agree with most of this, but you cleverly avoided to reply my question
Let´s try this way.... Did you enjoy 2002 seasson?
Ferrari won 15/17 GPs, and they were using those awesome V10 engines, and the cars were much much quicker than any other junior series, and they were allowed for in-seasson development...
But the competition was also predictable and boring, so the problem is not the freeze, the sound, or the laptimes.
Anycase I agree they´re going deeper into the problem, now we have a boring competition like previously, team perfomances are further away each other, the sound is worse, the engines are also frozen, last race scores double points... That´s the reason I think F1 bosses should retire, they don´t have more useful ideas, time for a change.