I started in 98, and to me F1 hit its peak somewhere in 99-00, held up there until 2002 and than gradually started to slide downhill. Mostly due to the great arrival of manufacturers which made an allready expensive sport even more expensive and neverending rule change with more and more limitations added.Oehrly wrote: ↑21 Mar 2024, 17:00I want to give my opinion here as well because it differs quite a lot from what some/many people in this thread are proposing. I think that is very interesting, and I'm not entirely sure what may be the cause of this.
First, I started watching F1 shortly after 2010. That means, for me, an F1 car has always had DRS and a (K)ERS system. Also, that was near the end of the V8's, so I never grew to associate the screaming V10 and V12 engines with Formula 1. This all probably has a noticeable impact on how I see Formula 1 today.
The screaming V10 and V12 engines from past times do sound impressive, that is for sure. But I also find them rather annoying (please forgive me) after hearing them for a while. And importantly, they don't spark the "hey that's proper F1" feeling in me like they do for some of you, apparently.
For me, Formula 1 is at least as much an engineering competition as it is a driver competition. That means technology should be on the bleeding edge. And being better than the rest by building the superior car is part of F1 for me. A balance of performance regulation would partially destroy what I like about F1.
But bleeding edge should also mean that reliability is not as close to 100% as it is now. In that regard, I agree a lot with the suggestions of @Andi76. Make the teams push their car more to the limit to make reliability a bigger factor again.
Additionally, pushing to the limit would mean that we the viewers can better see the incredible work that the drivers are doing. I wouldn't even necessarily argue that the car, fuel and tire management they are doing nowadays is much less demanding. But it is certainly something that the viewer doesn't visibly see much of. Wrestling the car while pushing to the limit is much better to watch.
Reintroducing refuelling would be interesting, for sure. More strategic options are certainly interesting for the avid fan. If you want to cater to a more casual audience as well, this added complexity is maybe not a good idea. And while I'd enjoy it a lot, I'm not sure that it would be beneficial for the sport overall.
In general, the ideas like BOP, reverse grids, going back to screaming V10s (or other engines just for the sake of the sound) are really not appealing to me. F1 should be an engineering competition. F1 should not be what it was back at some point. It should be on the bleeding edge of technology and that bleeding edge is moving forward and F1 needs to move with it.
The beauty if V10s was not only brutality, but also their fragility. Tou never knew when an engine will blow. Cars were twitchy, snappy and even champions were caught off guard from time to time and went off track. Tracks had gravel traps and mistakes cist drivers much more time than they do today where they simply drive out of track, many times full throttle. Liveries were diverse, cars in all shapes and sizes. Gaps between drivers were from few tenths, to seconds just between few places. Seeing underdogs get a surprise podium or points was great.
Today F1 is just too bland, monotone and standardised. Half of the grid gets points, only few cars retire. Many drivers are more like teenagers than men and simply lacking charisma. Racing became more of damage control than pushing flatout. Cost saving everywhere and coasting in the race. There is no real rivalry, because when one team gets ahead it will stay there for a whole season or even more seasons due to the prohibition of testing and funding. I personally also dislike that 10 cars are in less than a second apart in quali, which mean if someone was unlucky by a gust of wind, it can be a difference if 5th or 10th on the grid.
F1 was great when privateers made majority of the grid, when corporations take over everything changes.