ScottB wrote: ↑23 Mar 2026, 15:33
A screaming V8 / V10 is an anachronism at this point. Roadcars don't use them, much of the modern fanbase has never encountered them.
They were an anachronism in the 1990s. If I recall correctly, the only V10 road vehicles in that decade were a Dodge Viper and a Ford F-250. "Most of the modern fanbase" in the 1990s & early 2000s hadn't encountered them either. This is what gave them mystique, aside from the ethereal sound. One reason why it's important to be intrepid instead of compromising. (Although it was somewhat on accident.)
ScottB wrote: ↑23 Mar 2026, 15:33
The emotional attachment is there for those of us that do remember them of course, but they're out dated, retro and feels like a risk for F1 to decline into a retro series, potentially losing manufacturer support etc etc.
They're not outdated nor retro. They were not the result of emotional attachment, they were the result of engineering decisions. Cylinder count was free during the first seasons of that era, and 8, 10, and 12 cylinder engines were pursued. 10 was found to be the best compromise of piston size and running losses. Note all of those are inherently balanced cylinder arrangements, sometimes with some wilfull compromising of vee angles but not always. Your erudite, learned V6 on the other hand has inherent imbalance.
Engine balance and firing pattern are of real importance to engine performance and to engineers. It's not that one day some myopic engineer woke up some day and decided to express his largess and bragadociousness in the form of engine dimensions. Straight-8 engines were valued in the early days for their smooth power delivery. Many, many V-12s exist in aero engine history. 14- & 18-cylinder radial engines survived well into the turbojet age.
If I consider aesthetics in isolation though, the 3l Ferrari V12 must be peak F1; what a surreal sound--and definitely not outdated, because those specs and tolerances cannot go out of date. In fact, they're still in use in your "state of art," "high tech" hybrid V6s.
ScottB wrote: ↑23 Mar 2026, 15:33
You can argue for and against that, of course, but Liberty is a business with a mandate to make maximum money for it's shareholders, which to me leans towards manufacturer backed, hybrid engines, not risking a 1 or 2 make engine series with a smaller fan base / loss of money generating city tracks and so on.
LiburdeeTM is distribution rights, iirc. I'd think they'd want wow factor over OEM lobbying. I would expect they had a say in these current regs which produce more passes via power unit handicapping. Went the clickbait route.
ScottB wrote: ↑23 Mar 2026, 15:33
The manufacturers are likely to want hybrids. That's what they're trying to sell on the road, so they'll want that link. The 50/50 split was too far and not required from a marketing perspective. A V6 turbo hybrid with more power from the ICE ticks all the boxes, and still let's the sport
play a green card when it's turning up at all it's new street tracks etc, and ties in with the sort of flagship performance cars the likes of Ferrari, Merc, Audi, Mclaren etc etc will be trying to sell.
But we should not advocate for this. It is dishonest.