Agreed, how many high speed sweeping bends seen so far? One?WilliamsF1 wrote:I think FE got it wrong by setting itself up too slow.
And the tracks though they are located in cities the layouts are just awful.
andylaurence wrote:Formula E is about sustainability. The tyres are as they are so that teams don't have to cart large numbers of spare tyres and wheels around the world. That costs money and burns fuel in the transport planes. A 400kg battery would make the cars very heavy (they're already too heavy), which is why they've used a 400kg battery split over two cars to get the performance they wanted for the whole race length they wanted without having to swap batteries or recharge. Personally, I'd have rather seen two shorter races though.
Lugging around wet tyres as well as dry means twice the number of tyres being transported. Most of my spares package is wheels and I suspect it accounts for a large proportion of most teams' spares package.WilliamsF1 wrote:Michelin are great in making endurance tyres; they can probably make dry tyres that last all the races (considering 10 races 90 km each) without any issue. and lugging around 1 spare set of wet weather tyres is not an issue (which hey probably are).
That's a good question. I don't know, but let's compare with an F3 car. An F3 car is 550kg with driver, whilst the Formula E car is 888kg with driver. That's a difference of 338kg. Comparatively, the engine, exhaust and fuel system won't be needed, saving perhaps 120kg. There's bigger wheels (and tyres) and bigger brakes (to slow a heavier car and fill those big wheels), which might account for an extra 20kg. The cooling system might well be heavier, given it has to cool the motor, electronics and batteries. I'm not sure where you got the figures for the motor/electronics from, but that's 41kg to add, most likely with about 10kg of wiring loom and mountings to fit it all. The Formula E website lists 320kg for the batteries. List just those elements and we're at 821kg, which is only 67kg (7.5%) from the listed figure.WilliamsF1 wrote:400 KG battery:
- The current car weighs 890 kgs with a driver.
- current car has a 200 kg battery
- a 26 kg motor
- 15 kg of power electronics
- probably a 30kg gearbox
- some cooling equipment (which is not much)
So why does the car weigh 890 kgs
A typical formula race car is around 400-500 kgs with a 100 kg engine
Agree, I think once they start with car development the only rule regarding aerodynamics should be: wings are banned.WilliamsF1 wrote:I think FE got it wrong by setting itself up too slow.
They got it wrong by going for a high drag configuration with conventional wings rather than full under body tunnels
I love this rule, it provides real competition, I´m a bit tired of F1 overtakings, 90% of them are not driver related, but DRS, or different tiresWilliamsF1 wrote:They got the tyres all wrong, don't see what the current configuration achieves. Even local club racers have better tyres
I also would love to see cars with more endurance even if they´re heavier, but as a drone pilot I can tell you battery weight can´t be increased infinitely. Double battery capacity does equal double battery endurance, the added weight makes you drain the battery faster, so at some point it´s not worth to increase battery capacity any further.WilliamsF1 wrote:They went for a 200 kg battery which certainly does not seem adequate, maybe a 400kg battery would have added more to the car performance
I love the idea of urban tracks to improve visibility for the championship, but the layouts are just awful, that´s trueWilliamsF1 wrote:And the tracks though they are located in cities the layouts are just awful.
It was watchable. Wasn't special. Whoever came up with the safety car procedure deserves a bullet. (whoever came up with the safety car too actually) 20% of the race was safety car again.Andres125sx wrote:I was talking about D´Ambrosio and DiGrassi´s recovers, they did it with same car, same tires, etc. than the rest of the grid
Yes fan boost is some sort of DRS, but only for 3 drivers (Heidfeld, Legge and Senna this time) and only for 5 seconds, same as if in F1 they could use DRS only two times in the whole GP
IMO that´s a simple marketing exercice to atract young people, so they can think they´re interacting with the race, but the real influence is quite limited