dumrick wrote:Raptor, you seem the kind of guy who would try to sell a Porsche for its ride confort and then scratch the head asking why your costumer went to a Bentley dealership instead.
Allow me to repeat myself a little:
- Formula One
isn't the alpha and omega of motorsports;
- The road-relevance of Formula One is just the
pitch that was thrown at the boards of directors of the big manufacturing companies to convince them to put money on it;
- The need for F1 to try to fulfill
its own role and the
roles of all other forms of motorsport arouse when all other forms motorsport were choked to death for the
glory and
single domination of Formula One.
Formula One has lead to roadcar-relevant developments in powertrain technologies alone. Concerning chassis technologies:
Raptor22 wrote:Technologies developed in the 50's and 60's found its way onto production road cars not 10 yrs later, i.e. monocoque chassis
I give you a mass production monocoque. Dated 1934...:
Raptor22 wrote:wishbone suspension
If
your car has double wishbone suspension, congratulations. Mine and more than 90% of street cars don't.
Raptor22 wrote:he concept of undertray air flow for high speed aerodynamic stability
...same as above... people's VW Golfs benefit nothing from it.
What you seem to think is that
this
has to relate more to
this
than
this
Formula One must realize that it can't check
all the boxes in motorsports.
Despite Mr. Ecclestone efforts, there are
various motorsport racing series that answer
different needs. Mr. Richards should know that: Prodrive worked in road-relevant disciplines like rallying and GT racing.
So what you're saying is that is that F1 needs to remain differentiated and indifferent to passenger car technology.
What other sports are relevant? Well none actually. Sport is merely a platform for people to compete, for one coach to show that their techniques, strategies and tactics is better than the next guys.
But in all sports, the top performing teams ,individuals has access to the best coaches etc but often not. Why? Because in other sports, the machinary has very little effect on the overall result whereas Formula 1 and other motorsport, the machine plays a very big role in the final outcome.
Your view on Formula 1 ia very traditionalist and I respect that. My point of view is that those days are over and if formula 1 is to survive long term and be sustainable then it has to find opportunities to be more relevant to the man in the street than merely winged pencil thin bath tubs with crazy men holding on for dear life.
why is cycling big in Holland? Everybody cycles, everybody can relate. Thats the sort of position that Formula 1 needs to get to in order to be a sustainable platform for advertising and technology development. (ok you've probably already turned your brain off and have started your rebuff already, hangon a little longer)
Where is Formula 1 currently. It's at a stage where going backto the roots of man against man whilest the machines are as limited as possible. This is a good thing if people want to watch one man fighting another in fast cars. Even so, to achieve that the formula is still wrong since overtaking is almost non existant.
So the technology can't be ignored. In order to get Formula 1 back into every household we need more than just man against man, we need man with technology against man with technology.
Most standardised formulae have very limited global viewership but perhaps the best racing. So it could be argued that people don;t turn on their tellies just for the racing. They turn on their tellies to watch Michael Schumacher in his FERRARI battle against Mika Hakkinen in His McLaren Mercedes; man and technology against man and technology.
2009 yielded some of the best racing in years. There was a rule change and it shuffled the deck so others had an opportunity to show off their technology.
However that technology was focused in the wrong area; aerodynamics. The Technological aspect of f1 needs to be focussed into other areas, hence I agree wholeheartedl with Dave Richards.
Now that the dust is settling it appears that Ferrari now wants KERS back.... how odd.
KERS is relevant as it has both marketing value as well as technological.
So what else can we change to make F1 more technological? The engine rules...
With the world Engine there exists an opportunity to develop technologies that can find its way to road cars. This is attractive to manufacturers because it means tha R&D can tap into Marketing budgets and in a cash strapped world, that is a good thing.
Is the passenger car chassis an optimised design? is there revolution that can change the way we make these today? Perhaps, present the problem to a F1 engineer and you'll have a prototype in 3 weeks with a budget to develop it within 12.
Do this via the R&D route a dn it takes 5yrs due to limited R&D budget.
Will Touring Cars allow the same opportunity? NO, because the set of rules there are very different. In fact it will be a case of a Touring car being based on a production car that uses chassis technology developed in Formula 1.
Like I said in my first post on this matter. Do not let your mind be trapped in tradition an d look for the opportunity in change. Formula 1 can be so much more than "just boring little cars running around in circles" (quotes used because that is what my wife says)