i have experienced F1 good enough in the early nineties to maintain that that was the absolute pinnacle of having the most amazing machines in F1 ever and imho will allways be the real platinum gold era of f1, due to a combination of having not only the most incredible raw machinery, that reached agonizing speeds and cornering capabilities aswell as technological gizmos that are drool worthy, but also having the most incredible and manly tracks to reach those speeds on, aswell as a mix of absolute greats retiring/reaching their 'natural' competitive end aswell as young guns and legends that went too soon. (mansell, prost, piquet, senna, schumacher, hakkinnen, etc.) and legendary teams (tyrrell, lotus, mclaren, ferrari, bennetton, ligier, williams (in their prime), brabham, etc.), powerful engines in a variety of manufacturers (ferrari, renault, honda, mercedes, peugeot, cosworth / ford, hart, BMW, etc) AND the lifestyle around it (really extremely talented 'normal' guys, not ruled by paydrivers or money neccesity but enough wealth around already, glitter and glamour, hot women, and all reachable and tickets were not beyond absurd costs).HPD wrote: ↑07 Feb 2018, 22:53The white reminds me of the Super Aguri
https://images.hgmsites.net/med/super-a ... 0346_m.jpg
and frankly, all years after and to be honest from what i view all before all fail humongeously compared to that absolute moment of greatness bar some incidentical great moments (lauda, hunt, gilles villeneuve, piquet).
nevertheless, there were some great moments in f1 still afterwards. I agree that the Super Aguri team was one of those moments in time that reminded of the 'old days'. It was i think the last era of F1 cars being raw F1 and sport, where not long after, it turned into rocketships with complicated engines, complicated aerodynamics, complicated suspensions, tire management, complicated steering wheels, complicated rules, and lots of financial trouble due to high costs, global world economy getting hurt, several controversions hitting the sport, and the sport or 'leadership' aging without much vision.
f1 is in turmoil still now, but atleast the leadership has a vision about where to go, renewing the sport and breathing fresh life into it, making it more approachable again and seemingly having the intention too to lower costs and bring back exciting manufacturers.