I think you are excegerating there; yes the engine development is restricted (gearboxes hardly are, except for the material used), but materials really aren't the only method te strengthen a gearbox/engine. Furthermore, the FIA will allow a manufacturer to make changes on their engines given they can put down some good reasons.Also with reliability, how do the FIA expect these gearboxes never to fail given the materials restriction on engine/gearbox components? I know that is there to stop the costs of development etc but i really dont understand what an advantage of having a brand new gearbox is? in my opinion a gearbox either works or it doesn't?
A gearbox failure= a driver binning it on track? I think i'd have to disagree there, because the driver doesn't (effectively) control the wear on the gearbox, but the driver is definitely responsible for not crashing the car. I guess my idea would make it feel a little less like a team sport, but there are 2 separate championships going on, so it's already fairly separatemx_tifoso wrote:This is first and foremost a team sport, you win and lose together. A gearbox failure is akin to a driver binning it on track, so under your system how is this counteracted from the teams perspective? Well you can't, so if there is a mechanical failure everyone gets hit equally just as if a driver bins it.
True, but what about the fact that no team would want to lose constructor points? They earn money at the end of the season based on that, so I'd see no reason for them to try to race illegally or with a new gearbox at every race. I could maybe see a team (probably a front running team) stop worrying about the constructor championship if they were at the end of the season and were in a close fight for the drivers championship. Maybe that'd be worth it though. We'd just end up with a few rare times where that happened, and it'd probably make the driver's championship better too. If we were in that situation the drivers would have a fair fight in qualifying vs having one drop back automatically because of the gearboxrichard_leeds wrote:Technical infringements have to be penalised. Otherwise a driver with a single race engine and single race gearbox would gain an advantage over those who comply with the rules. It's just the same as drivers getting disqualified if their car has illegal aero devices or if the engine ran at 20k rpm.
Good point, i neglected to take into account that the intended design changes would make the gearbox reliability very 'knife edge'turbof1 wrote:I think you are excegerating there; yes the engine development is restricted (gearboxes hardly are, except for the material used), but materials really aren't the only method te strengthen a gearbox/engine. Furthermore, the FIA will allow a manufacturer to make changes on their engines given they can put down some good reasons.Also with reliability, how do the FIA expect these gearboxes never to fail given the materials restriction on engine/gearbox components? I know that is there to stop the costs of development etc but i really dont understand what an advantage of having a brand new gearbox is? in my opinion a gearbox either works or it doesn't?
We should btw also look at the teams instead of everything putting down on the FIA. The last few years teams are just constantly shrinking the gearboxes to get a slimmer back. Gearboxes failing is a direct consequence of ever trying to make gearboxes take less volume.