vorticism wrote: β03 Sep 2022, 17:47
johnny comelately wrote: β03 Sep 2022, 06:33
1. Fuel, road relevant (that includes environmental for production, emissions for combustion, cost, performance). And fuel flow limited similar to the staus quo.
2. Maximum cost
3.Sexiness, which can be in terms of blindingly quick and/or having a blessedly sweet sound (democratically determined, directly or indirectly)
That is it your honour
All the superfluous rules of the FIA are stuck in the last millenium and as much as anything keeps themselves in a job and adds to the cost for teams.
Taken to a nightmare but probably the most efficient extreme of it being a generator only unit would, sadly, have to be banned because this is racing, and racing for entertainment and I am stuck in the last millenium with one foot anyway.
You could definitely cart around an emissions test stand to the races if you wanted to. Some series use catalytic converters. A muffler and associated exhaust tuning could be permitted as well; might be useful at city venues. An inconel muffler would be volumetrically larger than ideal but not that heavy. Cost limits become an accountants game imo. Remember when RBT made the same car for RB and STR? Aesthetics are down to the artist and this reveals the polymaths amongst the engineers; FIA has been trying its hand somewhat at artistry in recent years and revealing themselves to be not very good at it.
I apologise for not explaining my points adequately, but where you have gone with them is not what was intended.
What I do propose is though is for all the able contributors in here to collaborate and actually design an IC engine.
The parameters have to be agreed on first. This is what you originally intended I think.
My thoughts are:
1. The current race formats and tracks are a given, so that governs fuel requirements.
2. The car format regarding recovered energy, that will govern fuel requirements. Currently we are at 1600cc, with the 2026 proposals it may be around 1200cc, is that getting ridiculous or is it our age old bias thinking that.
3. Aero limits , that will govern physical size
4. Fuel type, and you can see where the 2026 proposals are coming from, the question is will it be fast enough on a power to weight ratio.
5. Wheel drive, no thrust. Manual transmissions.
Quickly you can see this is resembling Le Mans thinking and engine wise I dont disagree, the Porsche 919 V4 was a successful format except maybe for the sound in regard to marketing.
Over to you...