Any such system would need to be designed to fail "high downforce". That would mitigate most failures.
Any such system would need to be designed to fail "high downforce". That would mitigate most failures.
I'd applaud that. But somehow I don't think it will be too significant. And the cars will still behave like very fast buses.wuzak wrote: ↑09 Sep 2023, 11:58F1 aiming for a 50kg weight reduction for 2026
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/sat-f ... /10517806/
Seems there will be an awful lot of trimming of dimensions to get the 50kg saving, especially if rumours about much heavier batteries and cooling packages are to be believed.
Well if the length would be much shorter it could mean a lot. But I don't see it happening.BlueCheetah66 wrote: ↑09 Sep 2023, 18:54Only a 50kg weight reduction is so disappointing. I was expecting much more. It is basically back to the 2021 level which is still too heavy.
I think it was suggested that the maximum wheelbase would be 300mm shorter - 3,300mm, down from 3,600mm.mzso wrote: ↑09 Sep 2023, 21:50I'd applaud that. But somehow I don't think it will be too significant. And the cars will still behave like very fast buses.wuzak wrote: ↑09 Sep 2023, 11:58F1 aiming for a 50kg weight reduction for 2026
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/sat-f ... /10517806/
Seems there will be an awful lot of trimming of dimensions to get the 50kg saving, especially if rumours about much heavier batteries and cooling packages are to be believed.Well if the length would be much shorter it could mean a lot. But I don't see it happening.BlueCheetah66 wrote: ↑09 Sep 2023, 18:54Only a 50kg weight reduction is so disappointing. I was expecting much more. It is basically back to the 2021 level which is still too heavy.
And why is that worrying. Laptime doesn't translate to good racing.
Naturally. But we're unlikely to get them.
It is if they are no faster than the cheaper, single make, non-hybrid F2 cars.
You can always make F2 even slower.wuzak wrote: ↑11 Sep 2023, 02:20It is if they are no faster than the cheaper, single make, non-hybrid F2 cars.
Which is a concern that the 2014-2016 F1 cars had, which lead to the current "monstrosities", as Astro85 calls them.
The 2014-2016 F1 cars were slower in corners than the cars that proceeded them, but they were also a bit faster in a straight line.
Yep. I don't think all of them are representative, on the McLaren/RB image the difference seems too little, for example.