My fave is how the BMW turbo engine of the mid 80's had 1,500 hp.
No, it didn't. More like about 1,200 for qualifying and about 1,000 for the race.
I'll call you up on that one - where was that a thing?
It is often given as a reason for Russell finishing higher in the points standings, Russell himself and Shovelin debunked that.
That one was definitely circulated to my knowledge.
Not sure I did... But either way - let's leave this drivers waffle far, far away from this thread eh?
Hardly surprising when so many of them have no technical bent at all. Crofty, for example, started out doing theatre publicity before moving to hospital radio ("And here's a mention for Beryl in Ward 7 from her son Bob - get well soon Mum!") and then sports broadcasting. I doubt he even knows the difference between mph and km/h.
That wouldn't explain Alonso qualifying P2 in Canada last year or the massive gap between teammates that can occur when it rains. We have definitely seen rain give slower cars a shot at a better starting position by virtue of weaker drivers in faster cars being exposed.
No. Certainly the management systems, rear brake by wire, MGU-H and MGU-K, et al are impressive, but they have no relevance to road cars. F1 cars are pretty much on the brakes or on the throttle all the time, with on throttle at Monza about 75% of the time. Road cars are VERY rarely at full throttle; most of street driving is at steady low throttle, so the F1 regenerative system are of no use at all, especially on long highway trips at a steady 2000 rpm. So, very interesting tech but of no use to road cars. The Prius was introduced in Japan in 1997.......AR3-GP wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 20:10Electrical energy management software, development methodology, and tools? yesGreg Locock wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 14:59My favorite F1 myth is that new techs are developed in F1 that then get used in production cars. Other than CF monocoques, nope.
Many Hybrid and electric vehicles today have brake by wire systems. These systems seamlessly blend the motor regeneration and the mechanical brakes. This may have existed long before F1 adopted hybrids but there is something to learn if you care to look for it. F1 and production may differ in the values of the control parameters but there is a framework which allows for crossover of ideas.Rodak wrote: ↑20 Sep 2023, 02:19No. Certainly the management systems, rear brake by wire, MGU-H and MGU-K, et al are impressive, but they have no relevance to road cars. F1 cars are pretty much on the brakes or on the throttle all the time, with on throttle at Monza about 75% of the time. Road cars are VERY rarely at full throttle; most of street driving is at steady low throttle, so the F1 regenerative system are of no use at all, especially on long highway trips at a steady 2000 rpm. So, very interesting tech but of no use to road cars. The Prius was introduced in Japan in 1997.......AR3-GP wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 20:10Electrical energy management software, development methodology, and tools? yesGreg Locock wrote: ↑18 Sep 2023, 14:59My favorite F1 myth is that new techs are developed in F1 that then get used in production cars. Other than CF monocoques, nope.
Agreed. The question is in which direction the innovation went and in this case and many others it was from road cars to F1, not the other way around. F1 road relevance is vastly over rated and I think F1 should just give up that meme and go racing.AR3-GP wrote: ↑20 Sep 2023, 04:13Many Hybrid and electric vehicles today have brake by wire systems. These systems seamlessly blend the motor regeneration and the mechanical brakes. This may have existed long before F1 adopted hybrids but there is something to learn if you care to look for it. F1 and production may differ in the values of the control parameters but there is a framework which allows for crossover of ideas.Rodak wrote: ↑20 Sep 2023, 02:19No. Certainly the management systems, rear brake by wire, MGU-H and MGU-K, et al are impressive, but they have no relevance to road cars. F1 cars are pretty much on the brakes or on the throttle all the time, with on throttle at Monza about 75% of the time. Road cars are VERY rarely at full throttle; most of street driving is at steady low throttle, so the F1 regenerative system are of no use at all, especially on long highway trips at a steady 2000 rpm. So, very interesting tech but of no use to road cars. The Prius was introduced in Japan in 1997.......