Giblet wrote:If we go ahead and have everyone with different engines, the cost of the sport will skyrocket again.
Why does everyone seem to forget the fact that there is no longer room for unlimited budgets in Formula1?
No it won't! Budgets are not set by the engineers, they are set by the boards. Rudimentary free market economics and human action teaches us that the teams each hold a certain perceived value/benefit to the F1 crown and involvement in F1. It is like bidding for a Picasso or a Monet... or buying fruit. The amount of money you are willing to part with is directly proportional to the perceived value/benefit you set upon the object. This is entirely subjective and determined by each spender. To me $5/lb. is too much for organic bananas but another may want to buy them at that twice that price because he esteems them more than I do.
Audi/VW/Porsche esteem F1 less than they do endurance racing so that is where they spend their racing budget. Ferrari esteems F1 more than endurance racing so that is where they spend the bulk of their budget etc. Each team sets their budget in relation to their expected return on investment, PR/image value and other benefits. What they do with that budget is another matter.
If the regs are tight and there is only 5% of the car wherein they can tinker in search of speed, then that is where they tinker. If the regs are loose and there is 95% of the car where they can look for speed, then that is where they will tinker. Now if the regs allow CVTs, various engine configs, active suspension, then that is where the budget will get spent. They will still spend the same budget because the budget is determined by the esteem each team places upon F1 involvement. However with looser regs the teams may actually get to tinker in areas that have direct crossover application to road cars like the aforementioned CVTs, active suspension etc. To day's cars are so narrowly spec's by the regs that the teams have to spend most of their budget in the tunnels, on the post rigs, running CFD with a gazillion teraflops, and stuff that is of little practical value to the manufacturers.
That will drive them away more than anything else. Look at the PR value Audi got from its LeMans diesels. That alone achieved for them more than the F1 crown has ever achieved for Renault. F1 needs to wake up and become relevant technologically for everyday road cars. About the only road car relevant thing F1 has contributed in recent years is some better understanding of combustion flamefronts, chamber shape, intake port sonics, EFI sensors and engine mapping along with TC. Now even that is frozen by the rules. This is plain stupid.
Opening the regs will tend to keep manufacturer interest. Tightening them and you approach having a spec racer series.
Innovation over refinement is the prefered path to performance. -- Get rid of the dopey regs in F1