
NASCAR run engines based on 1960's technology yet Honda are looking to leave Indycar and join NASCAR, whilst Chevrolet, Ford and Toyota are steadfast in their commitment to the series.
The assertion that manufacturers will leave simply doesn't connect with reality IMO.
LMP1 allowed for the most advanced engineering -- yet THAT was the series where all the manufacturers other than Toyota left!
Quite frankly, manufacturer participation seems to be a function only of cost and commercial profile, not technical sophistication. Even though LMDh is much less sophisticated than LMP1, manufacturers are falling over themsleves to join because it is very, very cheap.
Even though NASCAR is unsophisticated, manufacturers are happy because it is a high profile series.
Even though Indycar is somewhat more sophisticated than NASCAR, Chevrolet and Honda are unhappy with their involvement because the cost is too high relative to the profile.
Note too that WRC's Rally1 literally dropped its hybrid system in 2025, with no change to the manufacturers competing. Indeed the manufacturers wanted the lack of hybrid to cut costs...
This is addressed above and simply doesn't align with the realities discussed.zeph wrote: ↑31 Aug 2025, 14:16Because the manufacturers would leave.JordanMugen wrote: ↑31 Aug 2025, 14:00
So why shouldn't Formula One as the pinnacle of car racing also have naturally aspirated high-revving engines?
F1 has a high profile. As long as the cost is low (capped), it WILL be VERY popular.
With more sophisticated engineering, the high cost, technically advanced but low profile LMP1 lost all of its manufacturer other than Toyota.
We similarly have the World Rally Championship dropping hybridisation and losing no manufacturers at all.
[Do we have the likes of Ducati and Honda demanding road-relevant hybridised electric supercharging (with a generator/MGU-K on the engine) be introduced in the 'pinnacle' of motorcycle technology MotoGP? It's possible but I doubt it. If anything that would push costs up such that smaller manufacturers like Aprilia and KTM couldn't afford it and would probably leave, ironically... So it would lose manufacturers, as opposed to gain them.]
[Don't forget we have a literal simplification of the 2026 power units, removal of the MGU-H, to try to gain Porsche, Audi, Red Bull Ford and Cadillac. I.e., they all wanted a more basic engine, not a more sophisticated one. Even so the engines were still too complex/expensive for Renault and Renault has withdrawn and been lost.
