damager21 wrote:Wazari wrote:These new PU's give me a headache and it sure appears now that I retired from race engineering at the right time. It baffles me that the FIA is concerned about "keeping costs down" while they made it necessary to spend enormous amounts of money in R and D, and production to make a competitive PU. After spending too much time analyzing these PU's, it really boils down to the relationship between the MGU-H,K, turbine and ES to maximize output for an entire race lap. It has become IMO, ridiculously complex to keep "costs down".
If it were up to me, I would just keep it simple. Max 2.0 liter displacement, number of cylinders, bore and stroke unrestricted, single turbo, max RPM 16,000 and everyone must run on the same 104 octane "pump fuel" supplied by one vendor only. 8 speed gearbox, no traction control and no ABS. Keep it simple, allow creativity in the ICE design and allow much fuel to be consumed with mid-race re-fueling. This is racing for goodness sakes....sorry for the rant....I feel better now.
I agree. I think over the years FIA has got it completely wrong. They have been changing rules in the name of cost cutting without thinking about implications. In season development has been clamped to cut costs, but this has led to one team dominating the sport with about 1 sec lead over everyone making the entire event boring because you know for sure that Hamilton / Rosberg will dominate every weekend.
This has led to drop in viewer ship of Formula 1 and as a result sponsors are moving away from F1. This is leading to increased pressure on smaller teams because they dont make enough revenues from sponsors and hence start making losses making their operations unviable.
FIA steps in again thinking that more cost cutting is required and this is nothing but a virtuous circle where cost-cutting steps is leading to F1 becoming boring and in the process sponsors are moving out leading to losses and hence more cost cutting.
You need faster cars, you need re-fuelling, you need access to more fresh tyres to make it exciting.
I disagree. Well, in some ways.
The FIA has been trying to cut costs for teams, not manufacturers. So while the PUs may cost a lot to develop, that shouldn't affect the teams. But currently it does.
The V8s also cost a lot, even though they were frozen for 7 years. But they were cost capped - while the PUs haven't been, as yet. But likely will be soon.
TV viewership has been declining for many years. to blame it o the current rules is wrong. And it is as much to do with commercial decisions by the FOM as it has to do with the on track action.
Take, for instance, FOM's attitude to social media and streaming content on the Internet - they think it is a passing fad. Yet younger generations are as likely to watch content streamed to their PC, tablet or phone as to watch a TV.
Also, the vast majority of the viewers of F1 over the years have been casual fans. Those that watch F1 because they could access it for free on TV, at a convenient time (in Europe). Now, the trend has been to move to pay tv providers, who may pick up the dedicated viewers, but it would be doubtful that any casual fans would buy into pay tv for F1. The casual fans that watch pay tv are the ones that already have a package.
And not to mention the move away from Europe, the home of F1, and still the strongest supporter base.
Refuelling won't help anything. But they could drop the race fuel allowance. Better tyres would help too. This woudl allow faster lap times, and less fuel saving and car saving.
Better yet, if the rules were to allow 6-8 ICE per season, instead of the current 4, they wouldn't have to be babied as much.