Well, current F1 era will not see any form of diversity when it comes to engine configuration like it was up until the 90s when you had the choice of entering with a 3L NA or 1.5L Turbo. If they had something like that happen now, big bank engine manufacturers like Renault, Merc and Honda will just cry like little babies and FIA can't risk losing the cash from any one of them. In the end it is all just a business, and current state of this business is dictated by companies that are being relatively incompetent when it comes to pushing out reliability for the engine configuration that THEY THEMSELVES opted for.
If in 2017 by the grace and blessing of the Almighty Flying Spaghetti Monster FIA did allow the choice for manufacturers to either use NA or turbo setups while sticking to specific power regulations like in the old days but still keep some aspect of fuel management in the game, without a shadow of a doubt half the field will turn to NA just because they are relatively cheaper and easier to build and inherently a bit more reliable as a result of their simplicity and would allow for other smaller manufacturers to get back into the sport full swing... but then we will have the other half of the field that will just be whining endlessly like spoiled brats about how the other kids don't play the same game as they do. And as noted above, these whiny kids are backed up by rich parents who are willing to dish out as much money as possible so that they get their way no matter what. I mean who doesn't like money, amirite... Bernie knows what I'm talking about.
Said this before and will say this again, F1 is bumbling around half-arsing everything like a proper village idiot while WEC's influence is growing bigger by the day and is showing them how real sophistication and tech progress can be achieved without being ultra restrictive for the engineers. The recent "everyone is a special snowflake" attitude era of F1 leading to this drab homologation of cars, where every single car looks the same, drives the same, sounds the same like the late v8 era...
This would be the complete opposite of what manufacturers like Merc, Honda and Renault actually want and I'm really surprised they can't spot this giant looming disaster because all they are doing by putting these huge blanket homologation rules is that in the end every single car will be the same and nobody will care about the manufacturers and only about the drivers. And then these very manufacturers will go back to whining about how they need diversity in the sport to stand out more. I think this is like a cycle that is about to start here guys.
EDIT - I gotta say, I love every single LMP1 "car" that is in WEC right now, I love the Audi for being a diesel and having that really eerie jet whoosh sound when it flies by, I love Porsche for having a screamy little V4, I love Toyota for staying NA and not going the turbo route, I love Nissan for being eccentric themselves and making a bonkers FWD layout for their car. Ask me which "car" I love in F1 currently and I can't think of a single one, maybe the Ferrari because I like Kimi and Vettel more than Hamliton and Rosberg... but then again you see that I care about the drivers more than their ride. Sigh FIA, why you so blind.
If in 2017 by the grace and blessing of the Almighty Flying Spaghetti Monster FIA did allow the choice for manufacturers to either use NA or turbo setups while sticking to specific power regulations like in the old days but still keep some aspect of fuel management in the game, without a shadow of a doubt half the field will turn to NA just because they are relatively cheaper and easier to build and inherently a bit more reliable as a result of their simplicity and would allow for other smaller manufacturers to get back into the sport full swing... but then we will have the other half of the field that will just be whining endlessly like spoiled brats about how the other kids don't play the same game as they do. And as noted above, these whiny kids are backed up by rich parents who are willing to dish out as much money as possible so that they get their way no matter what. I mean who doesn't like money, amirite... Bernie knows what I'm talking about.
Said this before and will say this again, F1 is bumbling around half-arsing everything like a proper village idiot while WEC's influence is growing bigger by the day and is showing them how real sophistication and tech progress can be achieved without being ultra restrictive for the engineers. The recent "everyone is a special snowflake" attitude era of F1 leading to this drab homologation of cars, where every single car looks the same, drives the same, sounds the same like the late v8 era...
This would be the complete opposite of what manufacturers like Merc, Honda and Renault actually want and I'm really surprised they can't spot this giant looming disaster because all they are doing by putting these huge blanket homologation rules is that in the end every single car will be the same and nobody will care about the manufacturers and only about the drivers. And then these very manufacturers will go back to whining about how they need diversity in the sport to stand out more. I think this is like a cycle that is about to start here guys.
EDIT - I gotta say, I love every single LMP1 "car" that is in WEC right now, I love the Audi for being a diesel and having that really eerie jet whoosh sound when it flies by, I love Porsche for having a screamy little V4, I love Toyota for staying NA and not going the turbo route, I love Nissan for being eccentric themselves and making a bonkers FWD layout for their car. Ask me which "car" I love in F1 currently and I can't think of a single one, maybe the Ferrari because I like Kimi and Vettel more than Hamliton and Rosberg... but then again you see that I care about the drivers more than their ride. Sigh FIA, why you so blind.
Last edited: