|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
7 Jan 2024, 09:56 (Ref:4191006) | #26 | |||
Veteran
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,752
|
Quote:
I am a big fan of many different categories of motor racing -Le Mans is my favourite race in the world -but don’t recognise anything in your first two paragraphs in current F1. Overall just bizarre. |
|||
|
7 Jan 2024, 20:59 (Ref:4191055) | #27 | ||
Rookie
Join Date: Nov 2023
Posts: 96
|
I don't think many people have any doubt that Max is going to win the drivers' Championship and Red Bull is going to win the constructors' Championship but I am expecting a close fight for the second spot between Ferrari, McLaren, and Mercedes in the constructors' Championship. Also, expecting McLaren to win at least a couple of races in 2024.
|
||
|
8 Jan 2024, 10:49 (Ref:4191103) | #28 | |||
Team Crouton
1% Club
Join Date: Oct 2001
Posts: 40,009
|
Quote:
|
|||
__________________
280 days...... |
8 Jan 2024, 20:52 (Ref:4191158) | #29 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2023
Posts: 714
|
I have not watched F1 properly really since the dawn of the hybrid era, it left me cold then and it still does now. I remember the massive drop in my heart when Kravitz was stood at Jerez and didn't need to shout when an F1 car went past. I still can't get past it sorry. the cars are boats, the drivers are petulant little boys modelled on one of the dirtiest drivers ever to race in F1, Schumacher.
I do try, as I used to really love this sport. But for some reason I find it almost embarrassing, the riches spent, the fake hype, the ridiculous OTT build up. And then the same bloke wins every race, did for about 7 years and is now with a different logo and flag on the rostrum. Yes, there flashes of excitement, but the days of it holding my attention are long gone. I am actually now a little embarrassed to admit I used to watch practice, stay in and not go out until qualifying was over. I think once you realise there is far, far, far better out there it is very easy for forget F1, a bit like missing a home game now and then and realising there are other things to do after 20 years watching your team, or going to the same place on holiday every year. Habit griows old. I know a lot of people who have done the same recently I must be in the wrong, crowds are ridiculous, money is even more so, almost inhumanely so when you see what is going in the world. So as I say, I am quite happy to live without it, but it pains me a little still, as it used to be a very good racing series indeed. |
||
|
8 Jan 2024, 22:21 (Ref:4191163) | #30 | |||
Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 6,199
|
Quote:
Quote:
In a perfect world, we would have both. We would have the purity of sport (level playing field rules in which nobody gets a helping hand or is held back, technical freedom, etc.) and that excitement of unpredictability as to who might win (aka "Good Racing ®"). The problem is... they can't figure out how to do both at the same time. And "they" is everyone including FIA, Teams, Engineers, Drivers, and Fans. Especially the fans. Fans are good at stating goals, but poor about solutions. I will add a new "expectation" to my list. I expect we as fans will still complain about stuff. Richard |
|||
__________________
To paraphrase Mark Twain... "I'm sorry I wrote such a long post; I didn't have time to write a short one." |
9 Jan 2024, 13:44 (Ref:4191210) | #31 | ||
Team Crouton
1% Club
Join Date: Oct 2001
Posts: 40,009
|
|||
__________________
280 days...... |
9 Jan 2024, 14:43 (Ref:4191217) | #32 | |
Veteran
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 12,214
|
I'll say it, PURITY OF SPORT is a garbage statement and ONLY used to defend what the speaker wants to see. Sports are not picked off a tree, there are a set of rules made by humans, there ain't a single thing pure about it
|
|
|
9 Jan 2024, 16:17 (Ref:4191226) | #33 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 6,199
|
Quote:
All joking aside, tradition, continuity, history, etc. does matter. It's also fuzzy as there is no single perspective that is "right". And because of that change is hard. Richard |
||
__________________
To paraphrase Mark Twain... "I'm sorry I wrote such a long post; I didn't have time to write a short one." |
10 Jan 2024, 04:57 (Ref:4191264) | #34 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,752
|
|||
|
10 Jan 2024, 11:59 (Ref:4191297) | #35 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2023
Posts: 714
|
If you enjoy it, fair enough, I do not understand why, I cannot see why sorry, I see very little in the odd times I have tried to make me watch more, in fact I invariably fall asleep very quickly. I do not know why, I do not really know why f1 has become such a bore for me now, but I can only tell you it has.
If I knew the answer I could articulate it better |
||
|
10 Jan 2024, 12:39 (Ref:4191303) | #36 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 2,005
|
IF Mercedes, McLaren and Ferrari can get themselves up on a level with Red Bull then that is what I wish for. I would love to see the results shared between all four teams and the championships to be decided by a tiny margin at the last race.
BUT if those three teams can't match Red Bull I'll abandon that hope. Instead I'll go for one of those teams matching or beating Red Bull so we have a two-way fight for the championships. I also hope that track limits transgressions are brought under control. Preferably by changes to the track layouts but if not, by quick, accurate, hardline penalties to dissuade drivers from exceeding the limits. I hope that the FIA retakes control of F1 so that the tail stops wagging the dog. Of course this is assuming the FIA behaves in a sensible and honourable manner and we don't go back to a Balestre-type era. Then one of the results of that will be that Andretti gets an entry, which can only be a good thing. In 2024 I hope that DRS zones can be tweaked a bit to stop TenTenthers moaning about it all the time. In the long-term, car aerodynamics will have to be radically reined-in before DRS can be abolished. Sorry chaps, but that's reality. I hope that Williams and Alexander Albon get themselves to the front of the mid-field. Anything more would be unrealistic. My expectations are considerably lower than my hopes. On the teams front, I think it's unlikely that Red Bull will be seriously challenged for the championships (sadly). And even if one or more teams can be a match for Red Bull across the season, their drivers' points tally are likely to be shared whereas MV will take the lion's share of RBR points, partly because he is head-and-shoulders above his teammate and partly because RBR will engineer it that way. Finally, excitement. I don't see any great upturn happening in 2024, but I'll be there in front of the television every race. It's got to be better than Strictly! |
||
__________________
The older I get, the faster I was. |
10 Jan 2024, 12:56 (Ref:4191306) | #37 | |
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2013
Posts: 18,819
|
I don’t expect a repeat of 2023. Red Bull’s cost cap penalty could still harm them in the long run. Mercedes will surely build a better car and Leclerc will remind people he’s still a potential future world champion. But hopefully we’ll have plenty of good racing, with politics kept to the minimum
|
|
__________________
He who dares wins! He who hesitates is lost! |
12 Jan 2024, 16:39 (Ref:4191614) | #38 | |
Veteran
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 1,494
|
Red Bull and Max will win the championships next year, that I think is a given. That's what I expect. I also expect Haas to become even more pointless and Alpine to flounder like they have done.
What I hope is for Mercedes and McLaren to win a few races. I hope Ferrari doesn't implode further and extend the contact for both their drivers, to the same length. They need stability. I would also love for Alonso to get another win, but maybe that's a bit more unsure. Am I excited for 2024? I'm not sure. The fact the championship is almost certain a given does dull it a bit. |
|
__________________
Drive faster and longer than the rest ...in anything but a Honda... |
13 Jan 2024, 00:02 (Ref:4191677) | #39 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 1,257
|
So Mr Landsman
You say you havent watched a full f1 race in many years because you dont enjoy it. Thats fine, your choice, there are many sports, hobbies and fascinations for people to spend their time on. But you come into a group of people who are (mostly) passionate enthusiasts and loudly proclaim this. You havent been watching so you realy arent an expert and dont know what has been happening etc. DO you go into stamp collecting or coin collecting groups and tell them they are silly for obsessing on tiny scraps of paper and metal disks. Or Australian Rules football groups "I have never watched a game but heres my opinion about the latest happenings in your sport" Or did you think, just like that famous story, once you proclaimed that the emperor was naked, we would all gasp and realise "The little boy is right!" and change the tv channel? My point, if you dont like the sport, and havent watched in years, your right, but why are you here? What are you adding to the group? |
||
__________________
Bathurst 1977, best day of my childhood Worst thing ever to happen to Ford Aust Motorsport. |
13 Jan 2024, 20:49 (Ref:4191761) | #40 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2023
Posts: 714
|
The point is really that I USED to be a fan and the current iteration of the sport lost me.
I still watch a lot of motorsport, and sadly the world over in most terms F1 is the only motorsport that exists, so in places like this it attracts the most posts, the most attention, so i dip into it. I am aware of what goes on I just do not watch it live or rigidly as I did, I still know who wins, (lets face it dullards abound) but found watching live a truly dull experience on tv so moved on. I hate the fact, but I cannot sit by and understand why, I do NOT understand why people like it, I find it staggering that it is so popular, especially now with so much dominance around, yet for some reason it grows and continues to. I Almost find it a wonder of the world i really do. I just dont get it, that is part of the reason. I understand why you might be addicted to stamp collecting but to use your rather useless analogy I never have been interested in it so why would i post about it. I spent 40 years if my life liking F1 and watching it, and yet if I try now it fills me with annoyance how it has boomed so much"! as I simply dont get it. |
||
|
13 Jan 2024, 22:03 (Ref:4191768) | #41 | |||
Veteran
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 3,022
|
Quote:
BOP should only be needed in classes like GT3 where you are trying to balance wildly different vehicles, not vehicles built to an engineering formula. WEC have ended up with BOP for "reasons" but it's wrong. Setting a formula of 4L NA V8s and that all chassis and engines must be available to privateers for a fixed price would have done the same trick (i.e., LMP2 for everybody). Would that mean a grid of 20 Toyota-Toyotas and 20 Ferrari-Ferraris? Sure, but it would still be a darn close race! I similarly think WRC should have gone to standard Super 2000 not "modified" Super 2000. This way works teams and privateers would have all had the same equipment and it would have been glorious. That cars need to homologated and available for a low fixed price to privateers already solves the problems of thin fields in LM racing or Rally racing, you don't need other rules on top of that. Quote:
Even the Group A homologation cars were not strictly BOP, more like pseudo-BOP meddling in the pre-agreed equivalence formula, yet these cars be they Lancer Evolution, Skyline GT-R, Ford Sierra Cosworth, BMW M3 etc are also much loved. Same for the non-BOP Group B cars. Is anyone making retrospectives on BOP cars!? Last edited by V8 Fireworks; 13 Jan 2024 at 22:13. |
|||
|
13 Jan 2024, 22:20 (Ref:4191771) | #42 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 3,022
|
Quote:
- It has the world's great auto makers. Some like Honda publish intricate technical details of their engines in the Japanese press, like the compact cylinder head developed for 2021. - It is a competition. 2022 was a fascinting reset, and we have come to appreciate the genius of the Red Bull with it's excellent suspension for stable ride height, outwashing & downwashing sidepod design and superbly designed underfloor designed to minimise sensitivity to ride height & have the centre of pressure rearwards to maximise driver confidence. The contrast to others who were greedy chasing peak downforce and missed the mark (e.g, "hard and low" Mercedes that only makes downforce when scraping the ground, while having a forward centre of pressure that makes it feel unstable to the driver unless balanced by a barn-door rear wing) or the Ferrari that relied on a flexible floor and fell away after that was enforced was utterly fascinating. - This brings out political intrigue and drama. E.g, Mercedes deliberately running their car dangerously low in Baku 2022 to lobby for a rule change. - It has a mercurial drivers. The best sealed surface open-wheeler drivers out there, go karting stars turned world champions. - It has the great races -- the Monaco Grand Prix, the Italian Grand Prix etc etc. - Competitors like Red Bull or Honda love Grand Prix racing so much, they even host Grand Prixs at the race circuits they own! - It is not stagnant, but ever changing. This is in contrast to Indycar's 12 year old cars. - The cars are immense machines were are incredibly fast. Watching a Grand Prix car at full pelt around a classic course like Zandvoort or Suzuka is breath-taking. When it goes wrong, it goes horribly wrong, such are the drivers pushing the cars to the very limit! |
||
|
13 Jan 2024, 22:29 (Ref:4191773) | #43 | |||
Veteran
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 3,022
|
Quote:
Turbocharged V6 engines -- that's the same. Efficiency formula -- that's the same, albeit regulated by fuel flow instead of by boost pressure in the mid to late 80's. Artifical political and driver drama? That's the same. The BBC even opened the introduction to the 1989 with a "matter of fact" press release from McLaren F1 Team disparaging Prost and supporting Senna , in response to controversial events at the 1989 Japanese Grand Prix. The FIA wanted to impose 3.5L V8s even, but Ferrari twisted their arm to insist on allowing up to 12 cylinders. This is the same as a 2014 hybrid formula that was going to be the FIA 1.6L inline-four world engine, but Ferrari twisted the FIA's arm to ensure it would be a V6 formula. Chassis regulations that are full of loopholes, that one is absolutely the same! The alleged Aston Martin "rubbery" nose of early 2023 is little different at all in deviousness to the 60mm minimum ride height of 1982 being met by coming into the pits and pressuring the hydraulic system to raise the car just before driving above the ride height check laser and the lowering it back down the instant of returning to the race track! Ill-thought out rule changes? That's the same. The FIA imposed a flat floor in 1983. I think the Venturi ground effects floor of 2022 is great, but some disagree. There will also be doubters, whether it's narrower tyres being mandated (1993), grooved tyre being mandated (1998), wider tyres being allowed and mandated again (2017) etc. Aside from the tacky street races in Miami or Las Vegas which are an annoyance to most but F1 had already had tacky races in Las Vegas car parks in the 1980's anyway, I'm struggling to see the big differences?! Quote:
A lot of interest, as with football or whatever other sport, is in the other things around it. The story of Honda Racing Corporation plucking away since 2015 with at times a disastrous engine and Red Bull Racing plucking away at it since 2014 with merely the odd victory, to now have a superbly honed benchmark car is IMO a wonderful story! Ferrari being Ferrari ("we are checking") and Leclerc being unlucky ("why am I so unlucky") is a heck of a story. The demise of the Mercedes GP with their hubris of thinking they can run the car "hard and low" and realise phenomenal wind tunnel downforce numbers in the real world (not!), is a heck of a story too. As fans we came to understand the importance of wide sidepods to manage the front tyre wake, now that bargeboards are banned. Alpine? Well they took each other out at the Australian GP which tells you everything about Alpine. The lack of integration of Viry and Enstone and why the heck the French national F1 team is located in England anyway, the revolving door of Abiteboul, Rossi etc and the incompetent Piastri contract saga is a heck of a story. You have the resurgence of Williams Grand Prix with Albon the plucky underdog (and all-round nice guy) pulling off great defensive drives to score points, etc. If you follow it more broadly, people are following all those storylines which adds interest. Last edited by V8 Fireworks; 13 Jan 2024 at 22:48. |
|||
|
13 Jan 2024, 22:52 (Ref:4191780) | #44 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 3,022
|
Quote:
You weren't following the development of the RB18 & RB19 and how they compare to others. How a variety of radically different designs have now converged to an accepted "best" (or at least "easiest"), largely similar to the RB18 and RB19? You weren't following the development of the Honda RA621H, or finding amusement in how the fabled all-new super-duper 2022 Renault power unit (hideously unreliable in 2022) is now down on power in 2023 -- again. |
||
|
14 Jan 2024, 09:07 (Ref:4191833) | #45 | |
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2013
Posts: 18,819
|
Last season wasn't the most exciting I'll grant that, but there were still plenty of stories on track to keep us interested. And I still watch it because it's still the best drivers in the world and that is always worth watching.
|
|
__________________
He who dares wins! He who hesitates is lost! |
14 Jan 2024, 13:48 (Ref:4191855) | #46 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2023
Posts: 714
|
OK for you people that watch it still routinely.
tell me a couple of things, for how long? And mainly what is it that makes you watch it, what do you get out of it, and do you watch much else? I find truly interesting development interesting but a few million spent on a barge board interests me about as much as watching grass grow, I was lucky to be around when true innovation was there, now the cars look very similar, they are all pushing around the same areas and largely development is seemingly limited. I will give you an example. I will at times try and watch qualifying, I try, I sit there and watch 4 grown men holding a tyre blanket over a tyre, and think why, what is the point as in five seconds the temp is going to be lost as it rolls down a pitlane covered in dirt, footsteps, rubbish and then will be off track when it enters the racetrack picking up dirt. I used to find leaf blowers tragic, then this year WEC removed tyre warmers altogether and it made it fabulously difficult. I think I feel it has grown out of itself in a way, lots of very clever people gainfully employed (I live near Brackley that has been taken over by Mercedes, now ruining local business by opening new roads and trampling all over local businesses simply to employ another 600 people at tens of millions a year) All to get two overpaid petulant little men to go quicker in cars that bear zero relevance to anything anyone can ever drive. I find this a little how can I put it, silly! And sorry but the best drivers in the world is a very tricky argument, I WRC top men, WEC dealing with 3 classes night and day, rain or shine, INdycar being able to be quick at a road course and at Indy? Do you need more talent to do that? I think so. They are probably the quickest drivers, but the best is open for debate surely? |
||
|
14 Jan 2024, 17:16 (Ref:4191872) | #47 | |
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 5,325
|
I've been watching F1 for well over 40 years. I still have a passion for it, albeit that passion waxes and wanes over time.
I've posited before that people tend to lose that passion when they get far enough away from what they term their own "golden age", which is most often the few years after first watching. It's especially profound when a "new crowd" turn up who bring new enthusiasm but know nothing about your own golden age. I'm lucky; I've spent over 10 years up close and in some cases very very personal with F1 cars at the British GP. Eras be damned, they're all incredible machines and the current crop are utterly breathtaking in their speed and cornering ability. The only things that come close are the P1 Hybrids when they're let loose around the Circuit de la Sarthe - and, luckily, I've been up close enough to them to have my hat literally blown off. Sadly for your argument though about it being *silly* - please educate us as to how us mortals might have a crack in a WRC, WEC or Indycar. They're not exactly representative of a mild hybrid Toyota that we could all pop down to the dealer and test drive, are they? |
|
|
14 Jan 2024, 17:42 (Ref:4191876) | #48 | ||||||
Veteran
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 12,582
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Or is this more of a nimby view to Mercedes' expansion? Quote:
I would have though that someone who lives in Brackley and posts in a Motorsport forum would already understand that F1 racing has never been about the cars that most people drive on the road? |
||||||
__________________
"When you’re just too socially awkward for real life, Ten-Tenths welcomes you with open arms. Everyone has me figured out, which makes it super easy for me." |
14 Jan 2024, 20:02 (Ref:4191893) | #49 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2023
Posts: 714
|
I guess relevance is a poor idea with any motorspot really unless it is linked to road tech, I think LM and WEC has more relevance than most for cars that are not available to buy to be honest. Fuel, Oil, engine development, engineering, getting stuff to last flat out for hours on end is considerably harder to engineer I believe.
The aero involved in F1 and the vast sums spent on it has no relevance whatsoever to anything you will ever see on road cars. I dont live in Brackley, I live near there, and I simply find it fascinating that so many people, so much space is taken up to get two little men around a race track to sell cars. Does anyone else not think it's a bit crass, a bit silly, a bit emperors new clothes at time? I mean I can watch most things, but the money spent is astronomic, yes it employs people and that is good, but a lot of this brain power could be used in far more productive ways aswell. It is not an era thing either, I spent nigh on 35 years enjoying the sport and only the last 10 or so fallen away from it, maybe dominance, maybe hybrids, maybe tyre saving probably a combo of all. But I do however find it fascinating how popular it is, how much people will spend watching and attending and how people manage to let a few corners of excitement push them to watch for years on end. |
||
|
14 Jan 2024, 21:52 (Ref:4191904) | #50 | |||
Veteran
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 2,952
|
Quote:
My reason for loving F1? It's my happy sport. Example. You support a football team. They win, they lose, or they draw. They win, great, you're happy. Draw, meh. Lose, not happy. F1 - I have no strong allegiance to any one team or driver. I have my favourites and if I was pressed to say number ones, it would be Fernando and Ferrari. But that's the thing. Okay, Max wins by 47 seconds. But look! Alonso grabbed P2. What a drive! and Yuki got to P10 from the back of the grid, good on him. That's why for me, F1 will always be a positive sport. |
|||
__________________
Part time wingman, full time spud. |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
[LM24] Le Mans 2024 - 15/16 June 2024 - Who is Going? | Aysedasi | 24 Heures du Mans | 660 | 17 Jun 2024 15:06 |
Hopes and expectations for 2006 | Dixie Flatline | Formula One | 22 | 8 Mar 2006 22:03 |
How have the Drivers/Teams met your expectations this year? | BootsOntheSide | Formula One | 18 | 20 Jul 2004 21:31 |
2004 Expectations? | ATF | Touring Car Racing | 18 | 3 Mar 2004 23:43 |
Jag RB3 Expectations? | shiny side up! | Formula One | 14 | 12 Jul 2002 23:21 |