vorticism wrote: ↑26 Mar 2022, 00:40
Holm86 wrote: ↑26 Mar 2022, 00:32
vorticism wrote: ↑26 Mar 2022, 00:18
Does anyone know how this era came to be? How involved were Mercedes before 2014 in the drafting of these regs and generally in pushing for an end to the NA era?
As far as I remember, it was Jean Todt who brought up the idea of a global race engine, where the same block was used all across F1, WRC, WEC etc. just with different hp outputs.
The regulations started as a 1.6 4 cylinder, but Ferrari lobbied FIA to change that to a V6. When Mercedes entered in 2010 the regulations was pretty far in their writings I believe.
Do you think Renault or Ferrari had any idea they were going to be shooting themselves in the foot for eight seasons?
Were running costs that slim that Ferrari were on board with a spec engine block? How much did the 2008 economy factor in?
No, I think it was a matter of Mercedes being really good at thinking outside the box, and getting a concept that really worked well early on.
The 2008 economic recession played a big role, and I think even more the big focus on the environment at that time.
Thats why Jean Todt had a vision that F1 should be leaders in fuel efficiency, and these regulations are actually very well thought through, and they gave us the most efficient engines in any cars ever. Only thing I don't like is the sound, and thats nothing to do with the volume, or the turbos, but I just don't like the frequency of a odd firing 90° V6 engine ...