Conceptual wrote:In my opinion, parc ferme destroys the teams ability to improve from Saturday to Sunday, making the spectacle a parade.
That makes at least two of us with that point of view.
Conceptual wrote:BTW, when and why was Parc Ferme introduced in the first place?
Parc Fermé was introduced in 2003, together with the single lap qualifying. I remember how much that rule changed F1 cars. We went from 1-2 stops to 2-3 stops (and 3 stops was the norm in 2004), so races became much more of sprint races with softer tires and lighter fuel loads.
Funnily enough, 2004 tires had a brilliant first lap, so that 1 lap less fuel wasn't too much of a handicap. However, in 2005 tires apparently got a bit cold in the pits, plus cars out of the pitlane didn't have the super first lap, so even 1 lap more of fuel turned out to be an important advantage.
In any case and somewhat back to topic, after seeing the speed differential between racing cars and cars right off the pitlane, the FIA decided to lift the ban on tire warmers. This is IMHO good, since otherwise you are penalising *a lot* people with maybe just one less lap of fuel. Entering the pits before your rivals meant apart from the fuel penalty some 3-4s.
BTW: There could one argument against, let's call it, sunday Warm up. First two-three cars would then be set-up for optimum laptimes, or close to them. Midpack cars would then be set up for "fighting" so the field may spread out slightly more. This is probably less accented with parc fermé because no one wants to risk having a car in the middle of the field with a low top speed, even if its ultimate pace is great.
EDIT: I see the two compounds per race as one of the most idiotic rules ever, imposed only for the satisfaction of Bridgestone
I am not amazed by F1 cars in Monaco. I want to see them driving in the A8 highway: Variable radius corners, negative banking, and extreme narrowings that Tilke has never dreamed off. Oh, yes, and "beautiful" weather tops it all.
"Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future." Niels Bohr