There is certainly something of a fan crisis going on at the moment as well (look at the decline of the German GP, particularly with a dominant German team). I really don't think it is fair to belittle fans that want to see close racing and an exciting championship. I don't see what is wrong with that?mrluke wrote:What upsets the fans more than anything else in F1 is dominance.
Dominance is interesting, because it can both be exhilarating or off-putting. Take Usain Bolt - everyone loves him, but he turns the races into a farce. Still he has a charisma and style that outstrip all of that, and nobody cares, they just want to see him run.
I have never found an F1 driver to be so endearing, they are naturally disposed to being boring. So when dominance appears in F1, it requires two similarly skilled drivers to make it interesting. Watching Schumacher dominate Irvine or now Hamilton dominate Rosberg is no fun - you can occasionally marvel at the individual brilliance (Michael Schumacher, Spain 1996), but actually you get the most context of these guys skill when they are in battle, when they are working for their victories.
Anyway, to attempt to try to pull the ship back on course and away from the rocks of off-topic banning of unworthy punters, I do not like the concept of weight handicapped cars. I think engine performance parity is a totally different ideal, in that it still allows differentiation between the characteristics of an engine, but the way the team then exploits those characteristics is what makes winners and losers. I just think that defining what parity is for the current engines is an extremely challenging exercise in itself.