As we look at a major update of the rules in 2021, I would like to bring a question about where these tiles should be guiding the sport towards.
Basic question is the title: Are the current rules pushing F1 towards irrelevancy?
I will later discuss two sub-topics:
1. Aggressively set rules
2. Limitation of technological advances
Before diving deeper: I have been following F1 for nearly 40 years. I became an engineer (albeit in a different field) partially because of F1. I admit a decent portion of the dedicated fans are actually in my age group.
I do not mean that the attendance is going down. Liberty has been successful in adding more to the spectacle to ensure the race is a part of a circus. But it would be interesting to note, in Austin for example, a large fraction of attendants were watching the race on large screens elsewhere instead of the track itself.
This can be a result of the changes in the world which are making driving a lot less important portion of people’s lives. Less people are getting driver’s licenses. Local racing series and tracks are dying. The nearest track to where I live (a very large city) is nearly 2 hours away. There is only 1 go-kart track left.
If driving is not as important, and the race itself is just a part of the acts that are drawing people to the F1 event in town, how can corporations justify sponsoring or owning a team to the tune of tens of millions of dollars? Especially when even large companies like Renault and McLaren are struggling, why put a name on a car that does not have a chance to compete, that will not get airtime, and basically will make the name look worse?
Here I will go into the first sub-topic.
1. Aggressively set rules:
One reason why there is such a gap between haves and have-nots is because of the rules that make cars nearly but not exactly stock cars. Look at 2019 rules. They basically define the front wing for you. There will be loopholes which will be exposed. And bigger teams already have an advantage here with more engineers peeking into the details. They will have enough resources spend on that 1 mm area to optimize the aerodynamics.
Why not relax the rules and concentrate them on safety and cost? Let the engineers play in a field with more variables adding many different points of optimization?
2. Limitation of technological advances
A very simple example is active suspension. As a result of the active suspension ban, teams had to come up with creative and utterly useless mechanical tricks to imitate it. Massive amounts of money is dumped into ridiculously complex dampers/springs. Again, rich teams got to do a great lot of tricks in their cars. A cheaper solution would be just letting the teams have electronic suspension and have them program their way.
Same goes for traction control. It improves speed, increases safety. Why would you want to ban it?
Why not allowing more technology in both powertrain and handling? Just allow the series to keep up with the road technology and even bring the costs down by doing that.
Especially given the way the rules define everything nearly down to the bolts in your engine, there is no way the car will ever be technologically relevant. I totally agree when many of the engine suppliers do not want to get into this money pit. Why would they, after the public shaming Renault took from Red Bull and Honda from McLaren?
There are many ways F1 can go. I hope it goes in a direction that keeps the race as the main event, not the clown of the circus.