Phil wrote:What teams lacked in resources, they could make up with ingenuity at times and successfully so.
It also allowed teams like RedBull that started in the midfield to rise through the field. Mercedes too (speaking purely prior to 2014). And Brawn in 2009. Yes, Brawn had a ridiculously high budget, but it wasn't that budget that ultimately brought them their success, it was ingenuity of the double diffuser. Another example is Renault too.
And another example is Mercedes with their split turbo. Any reason you take into account Brawn ingenuity with double diffusers but not Mercedes ingenuity with split turbo?
Phil wrote:Having A-spec and B-spec engines is what would create a 2-tier championship. It effectively means that those on a B-spec engine would not match the performance of those with A-spec engines irregardless what ingenuity, creativity, money or resources they come up with - because in this formula, the engine is the predominant performance differentiator.
As I said previously in this thread, you´re assuming Mercedes advantage will be there forever, when it shouldn´t
Well, at least if they allow some development. If not then you´re right, but then the problem is that, the lack of development
Phil wrote:Andres125sx wrote:Sorry but...
2013 WCC:
1- Red Bull Racing.......596
2- Mercedes............. 360
3- Ferrari.................354
4- Lotus-Renault.........315
5- McLaren-Mercedes...117
6- Force India-Merc......77
7- Sauber-Ferrari.........57
8- Toro Rosso-Ferrari....33
9- Williams-Renault.......5
10- Marusia-Cosworth.....0
11- CAterham-Renault....0
4th in the championship got more points than the 7 teams below togheter. It was same as always, four top teams on a different league than the rest
Err Andres - what you're seeing here is the simple and obvious result on how the point distribution is. Let me remind you of the point scoring mechanism we have in place: 25-18-15-12-10-8-6-4-2-1.
Phil, that´s a clear 2-tier championship. You can´t explain the two groups, one scoring more than 300 points and the second scoring less than 150 with the scoring system.
The scoring system explains the advantage RBR got over second, not the step between top four and the rest
Phil wrote:I'll say it again - a real 2 tier championship with A-spec and B-spec engines makes this rather impossible of happening (under a engine dominated formula) and is anti-competitive.
You´re explaining this as if A-spec and B-spec engines is new to F1 and past times where better because this didn´t exist, when it has always existed
The problem is not because of A-spec and B-spec engines, the problem is because of a huge perfomance difference between Mercedes and the rest, and the token system impeding manufacturers to catch up. With free development all of them would be much closer, and with closer perfomances B-spec engines wouldn´t be a huge problem