gruntguru wrote: ↑24 Aug 2022, 00:05
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑23 Aug 2022, 17:50
wuzak wrote: ↑23 Aug 2022, 16:02
Apart from qualifying, at Albert Park they will have more than a minute where the power they have is the lowest power F1 cars have had since 1983.
Serious question: is that a problem?
If the lap times are quick, does it matter exactly how much power the ICE puts out? How much of a lap is actually using full power currently? Power is mostly used to over come drag at high speed - for many circuits, there is more power than is really needed for much of the lap.
The ratio of power to grip is important to the spectacle. If the cars have more grip and less power there will be a reduction in the skill level required to control the car.
At a simplistic level you can think of this as time the driver has to spend modulating the throttle as opposed to simply WOT and control the steering.
In which case it would seem that the cars at the back of the grid, currently, are better for the spectacle as they have less grip than similarly powerful cars at the front of the grid. And yet no one moans about the front of the grid being dull.
The reality is that most of the time the cars are on rails no matter what simply because the understanding of suspension, aero and engine throttle mapping are so much higher today than in yesteryear. If you gave the current cars another 200hp, the teams would just engineer them to be as controlled as possible for the driver because that's the quickest way around a track. Going sideways is great for showboating but it's rubbish for lap time in track cars - rally cars are a different thing, of course.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.