Perhaps testing such a radical opening of the rulebook is better done in a lower-profile series to test the waters. If it works well I would hope to God that F1 is paying attention.
Open F1 regulations circa 2020?
This nirvana already exists... Speed Hillclimbing in the UK basically has no rules for the top category cars; no engine limits, no weight limits, no restrictions on active aero... only really overall vehicle size limits. The interesting thing is that the fastest cars basically look like 1990's F1 cars with huge wings...Red Schneider wrote:Perhaps testing such a radical opening of the rulebook is better done in a lower-profile series to test the waters. If it works well I would hope to God that F1 is paying attention.
I'm skeptical of this. Somehow I don't think F1 tires can be said to have much road relevance whether they last 80 km or 350 km.mike wrote:4 tyres are to be exactly the same lasts a whole race + qualy(for road relevance)
Tyres lasting the full race has been done before (quite recently) and was a disaster. Tyres are too easily damaged either from flat spotting or punctures. Changing tyres has always been a part of racingmike wrote:4 tyres are to be exactly the same lasts a whole race + qualy(for road relevance)
I thought it produced some interesting races... and I think its almost criminal the number of tyres that get used at each GP.... But I agree the flat spot/puncture issue is a potential problem... but there is a way around that; allow tyres to be changed, but only allow one mechanic into the pitlane to change those tyres.. so changing one would be no problem (3 or 4 seconds), but to change all four would take too long for it to be a valid strategy....Tim.Wright wrote:Tyres lasting the full race has been done before (quite recently) and was a disaster. Tyres are too easily damaged either from flat spotting or punctures. Changing tyres has always been a part of racing
well even if you have pit stops it doesnt stop you from having punctures or flat spots does it?machin wrote:I thought it produced some interesting races... and I think its almost criminal the number of tyres that get used at each GP.... But I agree the flat spot/puncture issue is a potential problem... but there is a way around that; allow tyres to be changed, but only allow one mechanic into the pitlane to change those tyres.. so changing one would be no problem (3 or 4 seconds), but to change all four would take too long for it to be a valid strategy....Tim.Wright wrote:Tyres lasting the full race has been done before (quite recently) and was a disaster. Tyres are too easily damaged either from flat spotting or punctures. Changing tyres has always been a part of racing
fatter tires will never be able to compensate fully for lost downforce.Tim.Wright wrote:Any loss in cornering performance from this could be recouped by going back to fat tyres.
Codemasters is a joke.andartop wrote:The FIA and Codemasters prepare the fans for the future of F1:
http://uk.ign.com/articles/2012/07/13/c ... race-stars