Are you a politic? 23 words put together and no meaning in the end? Competitive advantages over what? Isn't there a market for Formula One? Does it have to take other series' place? Instead of the uniqueness of it, must we make Formula One fulfill the roles of other disciplines? Why does "the future" of Formula One have anything to do with "road relevance"?WhiteBlue wrote:The issue here is whether F1 is pursuing the right technical developments for competitive advantages in order to be prepared for the future.
This is all about the question of the direction the rules should take. Rules are foremost restrictions. They have a directive function. If you want the constructors to actively pursue competitive advantages in propulsion technology you do make different rules to a situation where you want the advantage to be found in aerodynamics. It is not so difficult to understand that I advocate rules that focus the engineering competition on propulsion technologies that are relevant to the automotive world.dumrick wrote:... 23 words put together and no meaning in the end? Competitive advantages over what? Isn't there a market for Formula One? Does it have to take other series' place?WhiteBlue wrote:The issue here is whether F1 is pursuing the right technical developments for competitive advantages in order to be prepared for the future.
There, we agree. The comparative little effort put in those areas is only due to FIA's decision that no powertrain should be significantly better than the others and that it should fit a "template". If competitive gains were to be found there (without the FIA castrating those gains afterwards), the focus would shift.WhiteBlue wrote:Probably not more than 10% went into fuel efficiency, energy storage and recovery developments. I simply would like to see these figures reversed.
The main point here is that the competitive advantage should not be ICU power. Competitive advantages should be total weight/power ratio including power from HERS and KERS and weight advantages generated by efficiency gains. If you allow the ICU power to increase very shortly you have to adjust something to curb excessive performance. Only by limiting the power of the ICU and gradually decreasing it with rising efficiency you create a stable formula which permanently pursues propulsion efficiency. This is what I mean by focussing competitive advantages on development fields that are relevant for automotive users.dumrick wrote:There, we agree. The comparative little effort put in those areas is only due to FIA's decision that no powertrain should be significantly better than the others and that it should fit a "template". If competitive gains were to be found there (without the FIA castrating those gains afterwards), the focus would shift.WhiteBlue wrote:Probably not more than 10% went into fuel efficiency, energy storage and recovery developments. I simply would like to see these figures reversed.
I'm not interested to push F1 into other series concepts like closed wheels or series homologation or endurance prototypes. I would never consider to shorten races like Ferrari propagate it. I want F1 to be as performant and entertaining as it is. That should never change. An F1 car should have a typical aero configuration which never changes and downforce should be limited to a suitable level.dumrick wrote:Concerning aerodynamics and chassis, they are fields where little or none carry-over was ever done to roadcars (active suspensions, ground effects, carbonfibre chassis?), and that always related more to other industries (aeronautical?), because people don't drive single-seaters with exposed wheels and wings all over. And if Formula One is to remain Formula One, these areas will never relate to roadcars. That's where the subject of other forms of motorsport comes from: there are other racing series for that.
That's not my intention. I apologize if that's the impression I have left...xpensive wrote:I xpect Ciro's wrath to come down on me like a ton of bricks any second now...
+1Jersey Tom wrote:There is no need for F1 to be relevant to consumer cars. Zero. Never has been.
The consumer relevance and "green" racing thing are just BS marketing ploys.
Only thing F1 should be concerned with is making sure it's inviting enough for a variety of manufacturers to come to the table to have a good competitive field. Managing cost is key to that.
Developing brand new stuff like KERS is directly opposite the cost point...
Managing cost is important for private and manufacturer teams. Private teams die constantly when costs are too high. manufacturer teams die in waves when the economic cycle makes them pull out. The key to lower cost is keeping engine cost low and limiting team head count. Hopefully F1 has learned that.Jersey Tom wrote:Only thing F1 should be concerned with is making sure it's inviting enough for a variety of manufacturers to come to the table to have a good competitive field. Managing cost is key to that. Developing brand new stuff like KERS is directly opposite the cost point...
1. There will be no refueling in F1 2010.Shrek wrote:I was thinking one way to lower the cost a little bit is to have 6 pit crew members over the wall The 2 fuel guys 1 tire changer, 1 tire carrier, and the 2 jackman
Mercedes achieved what exactly? ask anyone about hybrid cars and they will say " oh you mean the prius"WhiteBlue wrote:Managing cost is important for private and manufacturer teams. Private teams die constantly when costs are too high. manufacturer teams die in waves when the economic cycle makes them pull out. The key to lower cost is keeping engine cost low and limiting team head count. Hopefully F1 has learned that.Jersey Tom wrote:Only thing F1 should be concerned with is making sure it's inviting enough for a variety of manufacturers to come to the table to have a good competitive field. Managing cost is key to that. Developing brand new stuff like KERS is directly opposite the cost point...
Managing engine cost is mainly done by limiting the number of engines per season. Unfortunately there is also a cost factor in engine standardization and homologation. The tricky thing will be freeing up the standardization and homologation rules while avoiding a cost spiral.
Those who represent manufacturers like Ferrari, Mercedes, BMW, Aston Martin and VW have all come out in support of KERS for a new 2012 engine formula. The automotive manufacturers need to show that their key competence benefits the F1 car performance. If that is achieved it is irrelevant that F1 cars and road cars look different. Mercedes achieved that in 2009 by fielding the best engine/KERS combination.
will it solve one of the biggest problems of today's economy - rising unemployment ?WhiteBlue wrote:The key to lower cost is (...) limiting team head count.
The agreed Resource Restrictions for 2010 and 2011 will lower the cost of designing, building and racing F1 cars to a point where 13 teams are viable instead of 7 or 8 which we probably would have without restrictions. So in net effect employment will not significantly drop compared to what would be sustainable. It will drop to some extend due to the dissappearance of over inflated budgets like Honda's and Toyota's.noname wrote:will it solve one of the biggest problems of today's economy - rising unemployment ?WhiteBlue wrote:The key to lower cost is (...) limiting team head count.
Those two things have nothing to do with each other. People will buy the McLaren MP4-12C which will be the greenest super car in 2011 with lots of F1 technology.noname wrote:who will buy cars stuffed with green technology developed by F1 is we will be firing people everywhere?