FFS...
I am saying that if you freeze development of a product especially one as intrinsic as the engine you can't give a permanent advantage away...how is it fair?
If the playing field isn't level you can't have sport.
Belatti wrote:Sorry Chris, one personal question:
Do you like Formula 1 of the 70´s ?
are you proposing a fuel limit for each race?WhiteBlue wrote:They should not do anything at all on engine rules just let it stand for 2009-2010. And then focus on 2011 to get the competition entirely on energy saving. the energy limit should be set in such a way that no team can run full power. No rev limit, no cubic limit. Then the team wins that creates the most power from the given energy.
What your saying is what Ross Brawn has been saying for a while now - also Mario Illien & John Barnard in a recent Motor Sport UK interview said similar - open up the configuration (V8, V10, V12, Flat 12, H16, Rotary whatever) and fuel restrict it - and change the aero rules to reflect more of a 'ground effects' mechanical grip - and KERS is a bonus. I agree with the concept - currently its 2.4 litre V8's and in reality they are all within 20-25 bhp of each other and the poor old engine techs are laying around bored to death. Belatti - art for art sake yes I agree - it would be ideal if manufacturers were to just supply power plants leave the car and the racing to the teams - well I can dream.WhiteBlue wrote:They should not do anything at all on engine rules just let it stand for 2009-2010. And then focus on 2011 to get the competition entirely on energy saving. the energy limit should be set in such a way that no team can run full power. No rev limit, no cubic limit. Then the team wins that creates the most power from the given energy.
CMSMJ1 wrote:9 days in summer?
Superb footage
Sry OT
A fuel/energy limit is a great idea - it worked for the turbo cars in the 80's..so why not now?
I like that idea.Scotracer wrote:I'm all for a fuel limit too. 160 litres for a race and see what you can do with that
Careful here,pgj wrote:I like that idea.Scotracer wrote:I'm all for a fuel limit too. 160 litres for a race and see what you can do with that
It could even be taken further by banning fuel stops. It would force engine manufacturers to develop fuel efficient engines to reduce weight and would also introduce greater variability into racing as cars would be set for optimum performance either on heavy or light fuel. Allow engines to be developed along fuel efficiency and then reduce the amount of fuel that is available.
I do not accept that a photograph of an exploded engine on a dyno is adequate proof that an engine is dangerous and needs to be modified.