http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsp ... 657298.stm
For conspiracy therorists, what model of an F1 car does he have over his sholder!?!

Well, top-fuel dragsters are faster and noisier...Scotracer wrote:I love F1 for the speed and noise, and to remove those would kill it.
Actually, it may make some sense. I don't agree with a single engine, but if teams were allowed to build big (and powerful) engines with no electronic aids would require more from the pilots as they had to be softer on the throttle. It worked in motoGP. That with the new aero limitations would be good. Back to old school stuff, especially with all the post-Shummi talents around.Scotracer wrote: A single engine, as long as it's stupidly loud and ridiculously powerful, I don't care if they all have the same engine. If they remove those two aspects, F1 is dead to me. It's simple as that. I love F1 for the speed and noise, and to remove those would kill it.
Well, but won't any M5 owner be pissed if its engine lasted only 900 km? And would it be pleased with 60-70 litres/100 km fuel consumption? And weight limit is 90 kg AFAIK.majicmeow wrote:Take that M5 V10, lop off two cylinders, then halve the displacement, double the rev limiter and then add 200bhp. Then cut the weight down to less than half to ONLY 65kg. Then, try to do all that with no fancy gimmicks like variable valve timing, very limited oil supply, and the smallest possible package.
That's why they cost so much!
Scotracer wrote:I too fail to see what exactly costs so much. You have material restrictions, fixed bore centres and many other components specified, you have no variable intakes/exhausts, you have no direct injection, you have no variable valve timing, you have no forced induction...you just have a small engine revving itself to pieces.
Indeed.tarzoon wrote:Scotracer wrote:I too fail to see what exactly costs so much. You have material restrictions, fixed bore centres and many other components specified, you have no variable intakes/exhausts, you have no direct injection, you have no variable valve timing, you have no forced induction...you just have a small engine revving itself to pieces.
the cost of each bhp increases exponentially, especially with restrictions. If you make the engine with the same specs, you may be able to extract a few more bhps by improving manufacturing precision.
This is only my assumption of things
Up that to 15k RPM (top end of spring valves), and lower the weight to 515kg. With the weight loss, KERS implementation and weight savings, the racing may get more exciting. I would imagine the 80HP boost from next years KERS would have more effect on overtaking with a 515kg car than the 605kg one!wesley123 wrote:Mosley will ose them all, the only one who still trust the fia is ferrari.
Mosley wants to make the racing green with his kers, but he hasnt thought that all those energy that they save will be used then for those lights in the singapore gp.
So they dont gain anything from it.
They just have to change the engines.
Like a V4 BiTurbo Diesel powered. Limited to 10000RPM, that will take a loss in consumption and the amount of power will be the same or a little bit lower. Due to this changes the car can be uild more compact wich reduced drag.
Well making the cars lighter would be really cool and also good for engineers as the car will react more on air from the side.Conceptual wrote:Up that to 15k RPM (top end of spring valves), and lower the weight to 515kg. With the weight loss, KERS implementation and weight savings, the racing may get more exciting. I would imagine the 80HP boost from next years KERS would have more effect on overtaking with a 515kg car than the 605kg one!wesley123 wrote:Mosley will ose them all, the only one who still trust the fia is ferrari.
Mosley wants to make the racing green with his kers, but he hasnt thought that all those energy that they save will be used then for those lights in the singapore gp.
So they dont gain anything from it.
They just have to change the engines.
Like a V4 BiTurbo Diesel powered. Limited to 10000RPM, that will take a loss in consumption and the amount of power will be the same or a little bit lower. Due to this changes the car can be uild more compact wich reduced drag.
OR they could implement a rule next year that kinda takes advantage of what the teams have already used, and that is running the current V8's next year on 4 cylinders at a time, but allowing 2BAR turbos. I dont know if it would make the engine last longer tho...