Yes, and they'll all be clones of Lewis Hamilton. That way, nobody will care when he cuts himself off/forces himself off the track/runs into himself/cuts the corner and goes on to beat himself.ESPImperium wrote:The sports turning into a one make series.
Standard ECU
Standard Engine
Posibly Standard Suspension on the horizon
Posibly Standard Gearboxes on the horizon
Posibly one chassis to last 2 seasons
What next, standard drivers???
Thants boring.The FOZ wrote:Yes, and they'll all be clones of Lewis Hamilton. That way, nobody will care when he cuts himself off/forces himself off the track/runs into himself/cuts the corner and goes on to beat himself.ESPImperium wrote:The sports turning into a one make series.
Standard ECU
Standard Engine
Posibly Standard Suspension on the horizon
Posibly Standard Gearboxes on the horizon
Posibly one chassis to last 2 seasons
What next, standard drivers???
Really, it's better for everyone...far fewer appeals, less work for the stewards, I think it makes sense!
Hey! Happy birthday!donskar wrote:Really, I know many of you are younger then me (61 today!), but surely you agree that auto racing has as a key element the competition to create better and better engines, more effective brakes, suspension systems that more closely achieve the ideal compromise? If I read Bernie/Max accurately (and I admit I can not care enough about those two creatures to parse every statement and regulation they make) it appears they want nothing more than to create ANYTHING that will make money. My assumption is that somewhere in their fetid swamp of a brain they look forward to teams spending LESS , so Bernie and or Max can begin charging the teams exorbitant amounts in order to merely compete. First bleed the tracks, then bleed the teams.
DTM is not on for another two weeks.Scotracer wrote:Happy birthday donskar (and damn I feel young now ) =D>
If they were really sincere about saving the environment they would have no nightraces, they wouldn't request the construction of £100m monstrosities in countries that don't care about F1 and they wouldn't request that teams use disposable batteries next year for KERS.
What a joke F1 is now. I'm off to watch DTM
Yes but at least it's not pretending to be something it isn'twoohoo wrote:DTM is not on for another two weeks.Scotracer wrote:Happy birthday donskar (and damn I feel young now ) =D>
If they were really sincere about saving the environment they would have no nightraces, they wouldn't request the construction of £100m monstrosities in countries that don't care about F1 and they wouldn't request that teams use disposable batteries next year for KERS.
What a joke F1 is now. I'm off to watch DTM
And if DTM is not a spec series, I dont know what is!
why would they sell an engine for manufacturing cost when they spent 20 times that developing itWhiteBlue wrote: a lot of this moaning is sour grapes. F1 has been pronounced dead by the doomssayers so often you cannot count it. despit all cars driving with uniform tyres and uniform McLaren electronics and with a rev limit we are having a classic season as actual racing is concerned. we have many winners, thrilling races, a fight going to the wire and good entertainment.
It will not hurt to put the emphasis on the new technologies and stop the waste of money they spend for gear boxes, brake ducts and brakes. Even the teams agree that it makes no sense and they all order basically standard stuff from suppliers who bleed them for the honor.
The engine standardization could have easily been avoided and can still be avoided if the manufacturers agree to supply the customers at manufacturing cost. obviously they do not want to do this because they want to use their higher budgets to make sure the customers will not beat them. the best way for this is to take as much money from them for the engines so that they cannot allocate those funds to resources helping with competitiveness.
Before Mercedes went became a shareholder in McLaren budgets were massively lower. non manufacturer teams were very viable and clever engineering and management allowed teams like Jordan to come from lower formulae and get to the upper ranks of F1 in just a few years. But such competitiveness is only possible if there are means to use 80-90% competitve machinery as a customer. we see this situation with Toro Rosso and Super Aguri. I believe that F1 has a tradition in that kind of openess. A team like Williams started with a purchased chassis before they build up an engineering staff. if we want action and movement in the ranks we need to make the playing fiel more level in terms of available resources. letting teams with 1200 associates (incl. power plant operations) compete with teams of 30 people makes no sense. you cannot expect that to work. so something has to go off the top and end up at the small guys.
an F2 car will be very close to F1 in terms of safety and basic components. It will cost 0.3 mil € for one season. a Ferrari or McLaren drive costs 300 mil p.a. Surely it isn't right to increase cost by a factor of 1000 while performance goes up 15%? It have been the rich teams that have always blocked proposals to make F1 more affordable and more ope to new comers. something has to be done and hopefully they will agree an engine deal that will allow for efficiency developments.
Easy to characterize anything you do not agree with as "sour grapes." I'd expect something better than a thoughtless cliche from you or any other poster. You sound like a Bernie/Max apologist.a lot of this moaning is sour grapes. F1 has been pronounced dead by the doomssayers so often you cannot count it. despit all cars driving with uniform tyres and uniform McLaren electronics and with a rev limit we are having a classic season as actual racing is concerned. we have many winners, thrilling races, a fight going to the wire and good entertainment.