Keep refuellin banned. We had some of the best racing in a period where there was no refuelling i.e 1984 to 1993.
don't fix the symptom, fix the desease.
Check 80s, early 90s seasons. Barn doors @ the back, 2m wide cars, CF discs and pads, huge diffusers, flat bottom, wide slicks, seq. gearboxes - cars extremely fast... if it worked than, no reason why it wouldn't work now.andrew wrote:So that means that the only ovrtaking will be in the first corner then we can all go do something else on a Sunday afternoon? No chance.
F1 races where tyres last the whole race will only work if the cars are slowed down, braking efficeny is reduced and downforce is reduced. We might get some overtaking then. As it stands the only overtaking is artificial through pitstops or a driver having tyre problems.
No, there's nothing wrong with my memory of straight low fuel qualifying and refuelling in the race. The car on pole could dictate and respond to anything that happened - including running longer and then short filling to ensure they got out and maintained track position. That was the standard race strategy.mep wrote:Something must be wrong with your memories. When we had low fuel qualy and refuelling the cars had to run as long as possible on track. The guy that pitted last usually won because he could set fast laps with low fuel. You should really think more about race strategies before arguing against refuelling here.Errrrrr, because that's exactly what happened to make refuelling more 'exciting'. Yes I know it's possible to have refuelling and low fuel qualifying........we had it and it was got rid of to avoid the fastest car qualifying on pole and simply short filling to maintain track position, turning every race into a total snorefest.
Look on Hungary this year with the redbull. The fastest car always dictates the strategy. Mark webber made an theoretically inferior strategy work, just by virtue of being faster than everyone else.The car on pole could dictate and respond to anything that happened - including running longer and then short filling to ensure they got out and maintained track position. That was the standard race strategy.
When there is a standard set of strategy choices as to where you pit to get through the race in the fastest time all that you see is variations on a theme. The team in front always knew the optimal time to stop and could react to anyone that tried to do anything different. That's is why we got amendments like qualifying fuel being carried into the race but that simply resulted in a different set of knowns. Refuelling simply turned out not to be a variable at all. It was just a means for the car and driver in front to stay ahead more often than it being a means to gain positions.ringo wrote:@ seg. How could the variables not be there when refueling is a variable in itself?
You're forgetting that back in those days there was so many low budget teams, much more teams - 20 teams in 1989! Now there are only big rich teams, it's a corporate F1, so no wonder reliability is increased, but not that much as it would be expected for almost half as much cars on the grid.richard_leeds wrote:Manchild - you also need to factor in reliability. Cars in the olden days fell apart a lot more often, races were often about attrition.
We now have cars that never run out of fuel, bit rarely fall off, drivers rarely have to battle with mechanical issues nowadays
Numbers of retirements in a season:
1984: 54%
1989: 51%
1999: 45%
2003: 32%
2006: 30%
2008: 24%
2009: 20%
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Already been tried. It made qualifying less exciting because we never saw drivers and cars at their fastest and people questioned how well a driver had actually done in qualifying. It devalued qualifying in other words. It didn't actually do anything tangible to vary the race either. People simply guessed pretty accurately what lap a driver would be coming in before published fuel weights confirmed it.mep wrote:The rules I want to see is qualy with race fuel for at least the top 10.
Already been tried. See above.Fuel loads should be kept secret after qualy.
Well that's lovely, but how are you going to force teams to use different strategies? What you'd like to see is irrelevant. Like I said, the number crunchers all come up with an optimal number of stops and times to stop and no one does anything different because it simply costs them in time and results.The average races should feature 2 or 3 stop strategies with the possibility to go exotic with 1, 4 or even 5 stops (Magny Cours).