mistrx wrote:Really good post! +1!
+2
WhiteBlue wrote:bhallg2k wrote:That is the way it's always been. Technology transfers from road cars to F1; not the other way around
This is not true for the top racing class (GP racers) in a true historical context. The first three decades of GP racing were a hot bed of technology that found its way much later into road cars. As an engineer I'm not at all interested in the sterile years since the last turbo era. 2014 could not have come soon enough for me.
You always base your opinion on an axle to grind. The V12/V10/V8 era did as much technology transfer as it was possible and as much as any era except for the first years of F1 (when road cars were precarious and racing was the place available for more complex/expensive technology). Paddle shifts, variable intakes and all came to road cars from that era. And not much more, just like it will remain being so at the vast majority of the time
The current era will also have the same small technology transfer as any, you could not have waited more for it because you ideologically defended this kind of engine. It is a small scale disaster, just like anything that has politics stuck into it when it should steer clear out of it. As usual, many "truths" will be made up to justify it (like "having" to consume the least fuel possible or being "relevant") and just like anything going down this route time and facts will put things in place. Audience is going to drop, sponsors along, manufacturers after it and magically all those "truths" will disappear and more proper decisions will be made
At the moment I'm thinking FIA will allow a lot of development into those engines. The freeze will be disregarded, either officially or not, to attempt to reach higher revs and improve the sound. Which means another development war, much expenditure and something not very green. Hurray for that!
Sulman wrote:I think the 'green' label is unhelpful. It's about money, not ideology; it's reality. Oil is becoming more and more expensive, the developing world's energy use is about to rocket. We need efficiency, everywhere.
Look at aviation for a parallel. The drive towards composites and higher & higher bypass or geared turbofans for percentage gains in economy are constant. It's because fuel is only getting more expensive.
It is Formula One that has been slow to capitalise. Even going back as far as the V10 era, we should have been into this stuff. Energy recovery and efficiency are not the future. They are the present.
We can still have extremely fast racing; quicker than before in fact. But the screamers are gone, and they're not coming back. Ever.
So we NEED efficiency in a racing series where 22 cars of the richest people in the world race for 2 hours a week? Is that really comparable to commercial aviation? It's not even comparable to war aviation. In war equipment, mileage at least has some relevance. In a COMPETITION the relevance of it couldn't be smaller
You do realize teams most likely don't pay a cent for their fuel, do you?
Plus you confuse screaming with efficiency and high efficiency (any F1 engine in the past 30 years) with extreme efficiency (current F1 jokes, I mean power units) and you sentence things with a stark opposition to the truth. Most racing series don't even dream about anything close to what F1 is doing and that's pretty much unquestionable. You are saying bollocks
FIA is working hard to make F1 into a playground for 2 or 3 teams and so boring and in fact irrelevant that it may become not anymore recognized as the main racing series in the world. It did that with WRC and the excuses were EXACTLY the same (cost reduction, going green...). WRC today has a fraction of the audience and relevance it had before and became a Citroen/Ford category. Wonder if F1 is doing the same... It all started with the V8s non sense (costs WEREN'T reduced with it)
I've been censored by a moderation team that rather see people dying and being shot at terrorist attacks than allowing people to speak the truth. That's racist apparently.
God made Trump win for a reason.