Cam wrote:SeijaKessen wrote:Actually though, sports car racing is more relevant for automotive manufacturers now. It's a better way to test concepts to see whether or not they can operate within normal driving conditions.
The tech needs to find a place in real world uses or it's hard to justify the cost. This is why they're all probably whinging about the cost - there's no market to recoup the investment. Far enough too.
Finding ways to increase fuel efficiency, power, grip, longevity etc can all filter to the domestic and commercial markets. F-ducts could be integrated into trucks for long haul aero assistance to increase fuel efficiency etc. Reactive Suspension can go straight into my new VW. This gives teams the chance to earn some cash for the innovations and retain viability. It's not really rocket science is it.
Open wheel racing has a place but you need to differentiate yourself. If F1 is so concerned about being here it 5-10 years time, forget tyre lotteries to draw a crowd, bring back the tech, open up the regs and bring in the manufactures. Problem solved - purist happy - spectacle to sell tickets - no lottery. Best combo wins.
Hey, Dietrich Mateschitz - you can make this happen! Imagine it - every new Renault comes with a case of Red Bull!
I think you need to ask yourself some fundamental questions if you have any hope of turning this into a practical proposition.
1) Take a circuit, say Spa. What do you think the target lap time should be? Because in a completely unrestricted series with all these technologies you talk about you couldn't have a human driver because the car would be too fast. The human body has upper limits in terms of the G-force that can be sustained and reaction times.
2) With all these latest technologies what jobs do you want the driver themselves to have to do? A lot of the banned technologies, such as ABS and traction control, are tools that help the driver do a better job or do the driver's job for them. How much involvement do you want the driver to actually have and how would you enforce that?
3) If this is a racing series, how are you going to qualify the cars so that you have some racing? With all the technologies previously discussed the cars are going to be consistent and easy to drive, so having them qualify in speed order will lead to races where the field just spreads out a bit. If the cars are perfect then there would not be any racing at all as drivers could not make a mistake, so how will you either enforce imperfection or introduce racing?
4) How are you going to control costs and ensure competition? With unlimited technologies you need as close to an unlimited budget as possible, and that is unsustainable for the vast majority of the grid. Instead you'll end up with one or two teams dominating year after year because they can afford to develop new technologies whilst the rest are perpetually trying to play catch up. How will you ensure intra-season interest when one car wins all the races because they have a technology none of the others has?
5) How are you going to maintain commercial interest in this 'sport'? If technology can dominate the series by giving certain cars an edge then how will you attract newcomers to the sport? If only a couple of teams can afford to develop front running cars, why would other manufacturers bother spending vast sums of money just to be also rans? How many different manufacturers do you think an unlimited series could attract?
6) As others have pointed out, if it's all about the cars and the technology then why have a driver's championship?
I also find it amusing that the 'purists' have hijacked the word 'purist' and branded all dissenters as favouring 'spectacle'. Why is a driver dominated series a spectacle and impure compared to a car dominated series? Each is pure and each is just a spectacle when viewed from differing points of view. One favours the purity of the drivers battling it out in broadly equal machinery, able to make a difference, and the other favours the purity of the technology where engineers are unrestrained in what they can do but would inevitably lead to a series where the driver has little impact beyond just being good enough and fit enough.