machin wrote:Pingguest wrote:Leave the engines completely free, including the number of engines per weekend. Reduce the fuel consumption to 50 litres per race by banning refuelling and setting a maximum size for the fuel tank. Teams will have to reduce rpm, resulting in a better life span too.
Hhhmmmm, limiting the fuel (whether that fuel be petrol or something else) and leaving everything else free would be great in an ideal "money no issue" world... but in reality this would lead down the current path of F1 being too expensive....
I disagree. First of all, it's not about reducing costs but allowing manufactures to fully justify their large budgets. This can only be done by making Formula 1 more road relevant and hence allowing manufactures to develop clean and fuel efficient engines.
With a massively lowered fuel consumption teams would be forced to detune their engines, making them to last a much longer distance. For the smaller teams this could have a cost cutting effect, as they wouldn't need to change their engines after only two or three weekends.
I'd disagree that it would reduce the revs... it would certainly reduce the average power during the race, but I'd have thought that the teams would develope very small capacity engines running even higher revs (if the rules are free)...
A fuel formula would probably make teams to use turbochargers. In that case it would be easier to increase engine power by increasing the boost instead of running with higher revs.
I remember Cosworth becoming the sole engine supplier in the Champcar Series and the first thing they did was asking CART's permission to turn up the boost and reduce revs, because the engines would last longer and keep the same power.