no engine at all, only muscle-powered vehicles and... "go Flintstones, go !"
Ferdinand Porsche described ideal racing car quite a few years ago. put his definition into live.
I think I'm past that, now its simply denial and almost acceptance, but not quite.alelanza wrote:All you guys saying F1 and fuel efficient in the same sentence make me nauseous...
Oh, c'mon.alelanza wrote:All you guys saying F1 and fuel efficient in the same sentence make me nauseous...
...so you want them to create torque (work) with the ICE's then convert that torque to electrical energy then change that electrical energy to torque again to drive the wheels? Erm...seems a bit stupid.Green Genes wrote:Massively powerful, ridiculously high performance electric engines. You can still have a any kind of fuel burner to generate electricity if you want, maybe even a compact turbine engine or a fuel cell or the world's craziest solar panels, but all power to the wheels must come from an electric motor. Let the power plants be insane again. AWD if you want. Put the motors in the wheel hubs. Let's use motorsport to improve the breed. Imagine the electric cars you could buy at the dealer after a decade or so of being tempered in the F1 furnace.
Ciro Pabón wrote:Oh, c'mon.alelanza wrote:All you guys saying F1 and fuel efficient in the same sentence make me nauseous...
Any race car with a less efficient engine than its opponent's will lose. Always has been, always will. 1 gallon is like 1 tenth.
F1 engines are among the more efficient engines in the world, they have to.
So, taking an engine of a given capacity and getting as much power out of it as possible isn't what formula 1 is about?! I'm definitely an advocate of small four cylinder turbocharged engines being the prime producer of the power and then using further exhaust energy recovery and KERS to boost acceleration.... That arrangement is the way of the future for ICE's.... F1 should be leading the way....Scotracer wrote:it may be a more practical and efficient way of producing power, it is not the essence of Formula 1.
It's done all the time. Trains, ships. Sure they're a wee bit heavier than F1 cars, but that's not exactly what I was aiming for anyways. I figured that it would be a way to transition into an all electric power system like a fuel cell or batteries that can be hot-swapped at pit stops.Scotracer wrote:...so you want them to create torque (work) with the ICE's then convert that torque to electrical energy then change that electrical energy to torque again to drive the wheels? Erm...seems a bit stupid.
NASCAR is very powerful but no efficient.alelanza wrote:All you guys saying F1 and fuel efficient in the same sentence make me nauseous...