first of all thank you for your kind words, I’m glad my post are useful sometimes About the different kind of racing I think I already expressed my point of view, there are different disciplines and each one has his own particularity. IMO Formula 1 particularities are technology and ability of the driver to exploit it in the best way (being it by using in the race or helping with the feedback the engineers to develop it in testing); close racing even in the past 50 years hardly has been the strong point of F1 while compared with for example bike racing or oval racing. And IMO it’s a huge mistake to constantly make comparisons looking for a way, for example, to make F1 racing more similar to bike racing, they are different and will never be similar. Furthermore what would be the point, they don’t exclude each other, one can love and watch both, or simply watch what he likes the most. And the same can be said for endurance, rally, IRL, Nascar etc etc
As for manufacturers needing a reason to be there, that’s indeed a crucial point. And unfortunately also one of the reasons of the very strict regulations. Each manufacturer want to show his technological level but no manufacturer is willing to risk too much, being possibly beaten by someone else arriving with a new design making all the other designs obsolete. Just look at the imposition of the V10. Everybody spent money on the V10 because it was at the time the best solution. Then Toyota was planning to enter with a V12 because they thought the technology was mature for it to be competitive; to avoid the possibility they were right (forcing everybody to make a V12) the manufacturers already in F1 preferred to make the V10 mandatory. That’s just an example, probably the most famous of the recent years, but there’s plenty of similar situations even on the smallest things.
Here I’m sorry but I disagree with you.DaveKillens wrote: The great history of motor racing is mainly about cars and drivers, especially drivers. Make the drivers the focus of attention, place the greatest demands on all their skills, let them succeed, or fail.
Get rid of technologies designed just for sheer performance. Bring back manual shifted transmissions, get rid of the wings, limit the power from the engines.
Technology doesn’t exclude driver importance, on the contrary.
I heard from an ex F1 engineer that when Mansell and Patrese were teammates at the Williams, driving the car with active suspensions etc... often Patrese was walking in the pits scratching his head because he was unable to understand how the hell was Mansell capable to be 3 to 5 km/h faster than him in a corner that both were taking at full throttle and with, apparently, the same line...
Or... ask 10 people what’s the Senna’s race they remember the most. I bet at least 5 or 6 will say “Donington 1993”. Well the McLaren Senna was driving that year was possibly the car with the highest number of driving aids of the whole history. But nobody says that the TC, active suspensions, fly by wire etc etc diminished the greatness of Senna driving that day. In the last two races of that year that car also did feature a servo brake system to maximise the pressure at highest speed; that is, at the start of braking Senna just touched the brake pedal and the pressure on the brake circuit was set to maximum level reducing it giving it back to driver the control only at lower speed to avoid blockage. Senna won two races undoubtedly also thanks to that system. Does it diminishes his driving these days ? IMO no, because he had to exploit that system at maximum and certainly it wasn’t easy.
At the end the manual shifted transmission, I honestly can’t see why people make big deal about it. I mean, a driver doesn’t require a particular gift to operate a manual gearbox, hundreds of drivers in the world do it. Furthermore since 90s even the completely manual gearboxes in lower series don’t require to use the clutch anymore, just move the lever and that’s it for upshift, for downshift you just add a blip on the throttle. All the drivers know very well how to do it, they did it in all the lower series, way back since karting days. Once they are in F1 they don’t need to show that they can do it anymore, just like a physics professor doesn’t need to say “I know that F = ma” at the start of a seminar; A F1 driver just need to show that he can push to the limit these cars that, in spite of the fact that aren’t as fast as a dragster in straight line or have, on road tracks including 40 Mph corners, an average speed lower than NASCAR in ovals, are way faster than anything else in the same given road track and are far from easy to drive even with all the aids.
Here on the contrary I’m totally with you. At least about the intention, I would just change a bit the details : you can change tyre and refuel on the same pit stop, but you can’t do it contemporarily (first change tyres, then refuel, or vice versa). And since we are at it, a drastic reduction of both the pit crew (4 people maximum to change tyres + 2 to lift the car + 2 to refuel) and the refuelling fuel rate (5 or 6 lt/sec instead of 12).DaveKillens wrote: As a side note, I'd like to offer one specific rule change. Allow refuelling, and tire changes. Allow the teams as much as they desire. But allow only one task per pit stop. You can change tires, but not refuel, and vice versa. Would make for interesting strategies.
In fact during that era cars also ran without the front wing. That was because the cp of the underfloor was more or less at the throat of the tunnel (hence in the first part of it) and a front wing would have moved the car cp too much at the front, also considering that these car had usually a very high percentage of mass at the rear.DaveKillens wrote: Many years ago, in the heyday of skirted ground effect cars, I recall being told that the skirted chassis generated almost all the downforce, the the then tiny wings attached to the cars were there primarily to balance the aero effect.
It’s true that the loss of balance is a big problem because that’s what the driver feels (drivers are more sensitive to the downforce distribution than to the amount of downforce itself, just look how their confidence on the car changes with just a couple of “turns” on the flap at the pitstop) and that’s one of the main issues, driver will probably complain about lack of grip even if grip is possibly there, just because they lack confidence on it. And obviously this will also be very personal, not the same for all drivers.kilcoo316 wrote: I'm gonna disagree with Reca on the moveable devices (kind of).
My opinion is that the main problem in overtaking is a loss of balance when closely following another car - the front wing loses grip, and the car understeers.
Solution, allow a moveable front wing only.
Unfortunately exactly because of that sensitivity it would be very difficult to correct the problem with a movable device, the downforce loss is dependant by speed, distance from the leading car, rake, yaw etc etc, a quantity of parameters that would make simply impossible to continuously adapt the wing configuration in the right way to “fix” the driver feeling, the attempt could possibly make the car behaviour even less predictable than it is now.
Furthermore you have to consider that it’s F1. You (ie FIA) give them the nail of a finger and they (the teams) take the whole arm... as a start... This means that even if your intention is to allow movable front wing to “fix” the loss of downforce while following another car, the designers would think about performance only finding the way to convert this possibility in an advantage all the time. For example they would focus the design on the usage of maximum downforce from the front wing and then just reduce the angle in high speed sections. After all that’s more or less the same thing that they are doing right now with the front wing flap deformation. It’s aimed to shift the DF distribution to the rear in high speed section increasing driver confidence via a slight understeer while still keeping a slightly more oversteering attitude in the slow sections; obviously this happen gradually and in a very predictable way.