Facts Only wrote:Manoah2u wrote:it's rather simple really.
because of the restriction of using just 5 engines a season, the engines are not pushed to their limits.
because of fuel limit, the engines are not pushed to their limits.
because of artificial tire wear risk, the cars are not pushed to their limits.
not being able to push to the limits brings borefest.
being at the limit brings a danger of DNF.
all or nothing is no longer part of f1, its 'lets tone it down so we atleast get something'. that is not racing.
that is the inherent problem.
we now get teams to take penalties in 1 race so they can use another batch of engines.
You really dont understand engineering do you.
The engines are on the absolute limit all the time, its just that we understand exactly where the limit is now so dont cross it. Even if each driver were allowed a new non-fuel limited engine every session they still wouldnt break down in the race anymore because we can push them to the limit without going over it.
nonsense, Ferrari had breakdowns, Renault had breakdowns in 2014 and 2015 and was rubbish.
by "we understand" you mean we have knowledge of material structure so 'we' can more or less predict breaking points.
the fact that we dont 100% know certainty, makes it exciting.
and absolutely no, they are not pushed to their absolute limits. thats why there is fuel saving during the race, and when 1 or 2 safety cars have been around, they can 'up' their engine to a level they dont have to worry about fuel anymore.
lesson here if you still dont get it: theyre NOT running on MAX power. they CANT run on max power because they are block and consumption restricted. If they could run more engines, in other words, wear down engines more, then they could use more of its potential.
because of the fuel limit, they are never able to achieve their fullest potential.
if you still dont get it: in laymen terms, you drive a Ferrari LaFerrari but because you need to be 'green' you can only fuel it once for your travel. so you are not able to push it to the max to reach its destination. you are thus UNABLE to use the potential of the car. in other words; you have a LaFerrari but must drive it like it's your granny's honda civic.
even if you would not have the fuel restriction, you are only allowed one engine for the entire route, so there you are,
on the nurburgring, pumped having a ferrari, you see all the track records, and you can't even get close because if you push the engine to the max, it'll risk blowing up and so you will NEVER get near that record.
it's technical castration.
Also you dont seem to understand competition either. Nobody ever wins anything by retiring on lap 7. So no team is ever going to run a car that breaks down all the time unless they are completely incompetent... which they aren't.
And again, how do fragile cars beaking down half way through a race make for exciting close racing?
I'll leave it at that, trying to explain engineering to children on the internet is a bit of a non-starter.
children on internet? you must make a lot of friends in life. you are the one not getting it.
i wonder whether you actually have seen a race pre-schumacher. in the era of Senna, Piquet, Lauda, etcetera.
ill leave it at you personally not being able to grasp anything beyond your own imagination.
insulting other members is what's childish, so enjoy being the agrovated kid here.