Chuckjr wrote: ↑12 Oct 2018, 04:17
Really appreciate the strong feedback and opinions from everyone. It's great to read what people think of the situation. I am surprised at how much resistance there is to change, and a strong desire to let things go as is. I find that interesting because it seems so counterintuitive to competitive sport.
Phil I was surprised you didn't read all of my post! Lol! I took your example in post length my friend!
I didn't mean to offend by writing I did not read the full post. I did - or at least skimmed it (even the ideas) until I got the gist of it. But I didn't want to go into the various 'ideas' and argue each specific point, because I felt that would not be fair and not be entirely productive.
I firmly believe any new change brings a certain complication with it. Change requires adapting and the big teams (the ones with the most resources and budget) have proven over the years they have ability to adapt to new changes the quickest and in the most effective way.
Take the new engine regs: Mercedes have gone from being the most dominant to being barely ahead within 4 years. If you look at 2014, you will see that most teams (well, sans McLaren) benefited from running the Mercedes engine vs other teams with other engines. Within a year or two years, this situation has changed and narrowed. Last year, Ferrari was extremely close. This year, I'd argue they were ahead of Mercedes throughout the summer but failed to capitalize on that. Next year? Who knows - if we had a simple continuation of the current Formula, I would have guessed Ferrari and Mercedes to be equal with RedBull not far behind. Alas, there are changes again to the rules with the new front wings, so there's a level of uncertainty if teams will find new things to exploit that would give them a major advantage.
So, yeah, I understand it's not attractive to see the same team and driver dominating year after year, but I also think that proposed changes to the Formula again will not solve the issue. It will only increase it, as any change has the years before.
I honestly think F1 is on a great path. The big issues are being resolved.
We want closer racing, so the aero rules are being changed to accommodate that. Step one being next year with the new simplified front-wings and more will follow in the big revision in 2021.
Another issue is dirty track. With the way these tires lose rubber, it creates a clean path around the racing line while everything beyond is dirty and is a compromise. I liked your idea with the vacuum trucks. Personally, I think a solution should be found with the tires instead.
Lastly, there needs to be some form of budget cap to avoid big teams being able to overspend the little ones by that big of a margin. I am also hopeful that not changing the engine complexity will lead to a closer competition among the 4 engine manufacturers we have so that they are all closer.