You're aware that you've just rephrased my statement, right?FoxHound wrote:Wolff is responsible for his team. He has no responsibility to F1 other than his team winning, and maybe give a couple teams his engines.
That's the problem Ben, there is no incentive to increase anyone's responsibility to other than their own.
Is it any surprise each team follows their own path of interests?
Here, too...bhall II wrote:While I sincerely respect the hell out of his honesty, Wolff's statement emphatically underscores the stark reality that it's a terrible idea to give competitors an abundance of control over the rules.
FoxHound wrote:Why not let the people that design and build these things also have a say in what would be better, cheaper, faster and more entertaining?
No organisation with multiple entities will ever always agree completely, but at least in the teams case, it would be like countries voting for a UN binding resolution rather than Turkeys voting for Christmas.
C'mon, man.bhall II wrote:I think the rules should be devised in consultation with competitors, but ultimately published as a take-it-or-leave-it proposition based solely upon what's best for the sport's long-term health.

But, yeah. That's the gist of it.
Tires were brought up as an example of FIA ineptitude. I'm not usually one to defend the FIA, because criticism of its administration of the sport is most often very warranted. Not quite here, though.
The problem with the tires isn't that no one understands the correlation between temperature and pressure; it's that Pireli has been given a remit to supply tires that operate along the razor's edge that separates optimum performance from heavy degradation without any opportunities for meaningful testing with representative machinery. So, of course, they're going to recommend conservative setup parameters for the FIA to enforce. Blowouts are bad PR.
The regulations are chock full of examples like this: things that (maybe) made sense at one point, but have since been superseded without being deleted.
Here's another one: in-season PU updates are now a codified reality, and the limit on the number of PUs that can be raced throughout the season is still in effect. So, what's the point of tokens?
I think the technical details are far less troublesome than the overall framework from which they're defined. That's what needs to be independently addressed more than anything else. Left to the teams, you just wind up with boneheaded, self-serving suggestions like Christian Horner's call for a wind tunnel ban...
It'll save money!
Plus, we probably have the best CFD package in the sport.