Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑09 May 2026, 18:30
it's a 'solution' to what should be a non-existent problem (
pretending that 300 hp road cars are acceptable)
and it wouldn't be able to beat ICE-only on a track
the lightest car in a WDC F1 race weighed 490 lb
Could you elaborate? I don't understand what you are talking about.
Do you mean 300hp ICE only road cars are unacceptable (e.g., Civic Type R), 300hp+ hybrid road cars are unacceptable (e.g., Honda NSX) or 300hp+ battery EV road cars are unacceptable (MG4, BYD, Polestar/Zeekr, Tesla et cetera).
mzso wrote: ↑09 May 2026, 21:26
Pinnacle of technology would be to use the most advanced tech.
How can it be the "pinnacle of technology" when the power unit is heavily prescribed in every aspect of minutiae?
Surely you would have a turbine engine (or would a V-twin or V4 be better?) running at a constant rpm as the most efficient generator possible
in open regulations with an energy flow rate and nothing else BUT if I understand correctly Formula One is
not allowed to use generator engines only, since Formula E has exclusive rights to pure electric drive?
Surely that will always be a hindrance to F1: that the engine
must be connected to the wheels, due to this agreement with Formula E?
mzso wrote: ↑09 May 2026, 21:26
This proposed formula
doesn't accomplish anything. Neither small, fast and light cars, nor cutting edge technology use. It's meaningless.
I propose a turbo ban and doubling of the 1.6L V6 engine to 3.2L V12 for 2031. Accomplishment: fans are entertained!
I think the extra 20-40kg of the V12 over the V8 would be acceptable for the exclusivity. Flatplane V8 engines are found everywhere in motorsport -- be it Radical-Hyabusas or hillclimb specials with NME-modified Cosworth V8s to old Formula 3000s or GP2s at hillclimbs to the hundreds of historic F1 cars with DFVs-- so using V12s instead would give F1 a unique calling card.
And the fact of the matter is a lot of fans DO associate the wailing high-pitched sound of a Ferrari, Honda or Lamborghini V12 with Formula One, even though it has not been the case for a (very) long time (and we were lucky to get it in the first place, as there is no reason that turbos had to be banned in 1989), so
why not lean into that?
Why not leverage the hype around exotic V12-powered Aston Martins, Gordon Murray Automotives, and Paganis into Formula One cars which are
even more exotic.
You can still use sustainable fuels, have a energy flow limit (i.e., favour lean combustion techniques, not withstanding (please correct me) that this increases NOx and is not necessarily that clean & green...) and have a small hybrid system after all.
Furthermore the 2031 V12 F1 power unit could be fitted with a catalytic converter and Otto particulate filter, unlike 2026-2030 units, to further improve green credentials.
A consideration lacking from the 2026 regulations (or 2014 regulations) is the notion of combustion engines (antiquated and polluting as they are) being
entertainment.
While some fans have alternate views, many fans are not finding differences of electric deployment of several hundred horsepower leading to cars breezing past each other on straights (even
after running off the track onto the wet on the corner exit!) as being entertaining within 2026 regulations.
