gshevlin wrote: ↑07 Mar 2024, 02:38
It's deja vu all over again...in 1981, when the FIA banned sliding skirts, which allowed significant suspension movement, the teams responded by running their cars incredibly stiff and low to the ground in order to retain downforce. Alan Jones described his 1981 Williams as "like driving a 500bhp go-kart".
The FIA also imposed a right height minimum of 6cm. Measured in the pitlane. The teams responded by adding gizmos to their cars to lower the chassis once the car was out on the track.
The net result was 2 seasons of running cars with almost no ground clearance, and almost no suspension movement. Nobody liked those cars. Keke Rosberg, asked how the 1982 Williams felt to drive, said "it's horrible, quite frankly, but then I am on the front row so I guess it is good". Didier Pironi said, when comparing a 1950s Ferrari road car to his Ferrari, "nobody can pretend that he enjoys driving the F1 car of today".
The current FIA plank does prevent teams from running cars too low so that the chassis bottoms out, but complying with the plank wear requirements increases suspension stiffness.
Finding a solution that does not result in teams using trick suspensions to reduce ride height could be challenging.
Interesting quotes!
Only way to solve this is...
cplchanb wrote: ↑06 Mar 2024, 22:20
Hopefully this would mean active suspension for 2026. F1 is about pinnacle of automotive racing tech not nerf wars
It´s nosense that we can have active suspension even on a Toyota Corolla, but F1 can´t use it
Vanja #66 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2024, 08:54
morefirejules08 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2024, 21:35
Or perhaps F1 has a genuine problem at the moment
Or perhaps current and future Mercedes drivers can stop whining and raise their cars if they hate it so much
That´s what F1 teams do, slowing their cars down on purpose for driver comfort
When DF was limited because some drivers started to feel dizy due to high lateral G forces... do you think rulemakers should have kept those rules, and it was F1 teams who should limit DF theirselves to keep drivers safe? That is utter nosense. F1 teams job is building fastest possible cars within current ruleset. If safety is at risk, it´s FIA job to modify rules to ensure drivers safety