Zynerji wrote: β03 May 2022, 20:44
3. On-Board sound was waaaaay better than current cars, and the sense of speed was more pronounced.
Gee, it's almost like they had V8 naturally aspirated engines screaming away!
I used to imagine it as a modern day version of Schumacher's Benetton-Ford. The 18,000rpm limit was a step-back from how they used to sound (19,000+ rpm) but it still sounded "ok". A least a Grand Prix engine was still as it was traditionally in the DFV-era: two motorcycle racing engines joined together.
I remember in FP1 in Melbourne with the turbo hybrids that Alan Jones said "That sounds horrible to me". That was when the microphones were still placed up forward in the sidepods to capture the induction noise, like they had been with the V8 (& V10) engines. But with the turbo V6 hybrid, the
induction noise was something of a low-pitched drone [Ricciardo Melbourne 2014] instead of the
angry bark/howl of the V8[Hamilton Melbourne 2013] & V10.
So a few years ago, they changed the microphone placement and added a piezo microphone on the exhaust at the rear of the car and mixed that in with the other mics, so we hear a lot more of the exhaust and transmission whine on the turbo hybrid onboards nowadays. That does make them sound a little more high-pitched, but of course it doesn't make them sound like a screaming V8 or wailing V10.
CMSMJ1 wrote: β04 May 2022, 00:03
Refuelling was good in my view.
Refuelling is dangerous though.
"What fuel load did X qualify on?" was the height of tedium. No refuelling made the pitstops much safer, and the races build in a more traditional way.
I'm watching some of the 1983 races with pressurised refuelling too, and it gives a very different race strategy to no refuelling. While the stops in the 1983 season are impressive, for whatever reason, onboard jacks were banned and never reinstated. Refuelling was banned, reinstated and then banned again, I have no issues with it being banned.
If you have simple gravity-fed refuelling (and a smaller maximum tank size to necessitate pitstops), then you get strategy such as all the cars pitting on a safety car with just barely too many laps left to make it to the end, and everyone saving fuel and so forth (who can save enough? who needs to pit?) which is not necessarily that interesting.
continuum16 wrote: β04 May 2022, 16:41
looking back I actually think they are some of the better looking cars we've seen. In particular their so-called "aspect ratio" looks great to me.
The 2014 hybrid cars had the same basic aerodynamic regulations, with a few tidy-ups and loopholes closed, those rules were nothing amazing. In 2014 they were so slow, hence the impetus for sprucing the cars up in 2017!
While the minimum radius rule in the 2009 rules was a triumph, the narrow rear wings looked kind of goofy.
Don't forget that Grand Prix cars are 'supposed' to be
wide (very wide, like this Ferrari 643) and short, not narrow and short. The only reason that they were narrowed twice is because the FIA said so, not for engineering reasons. [Perhaps my copy of Nigell Mansell's World Championship influenced my view on the classic Grand Prix car look!
]
You obviously had things like a transverse gearbox on the 1995 Ferrari, such was the priority of designers to opt for a short car at that time, such was the car tyre and weight distribution towards the rear.
Zynerji wrote: β03 May 2022, 20:44
After watching the 2009 season on the F1TV app (race in review, 10 mins/race), a few things stood out pretty starkly.
Did you watch it at the time? It was decent season, but things change after all. I don't remember the season as a particular standout. 2008 (I was cheering for Massa!), 2010 (I was cheering for Mark "Potsie" Webber but his WDC bid went horribly wrong in Korea and Abu Dhabi
) & 2012 were probably more exciting.