Bring back v10s running on a sustainable fuel. Refuelling, and give teams greater flexibility on tyre selections.
Delete DRS
Keep the ground effect but force simplicity on wings etc.
Synth fuel in a way that is as ultra-concentrated as possible to try and get down to 50L with no hybrid or refueling.DChemTech wrote: ↑18 Mar 2024, 09:49Why synth fuel? It has no future in road cars and there is much too little of it; it would just be greenwashing. Use synfuel for areas where alternatives are hardly available, like aviation.
And for f1, just use a bit of regular - and acknowledge that f1 is what it is, an entertainment product with no relevance for day to day automotive products. A sports that is a relic of the past, like archery, but can be entertaining nevertheless.
That clarifies, thanksZynerji wrote: ↑19 Mar 2024, 00:42Synth fuel in a way that is as ultra-concentrated as possible to try and get down to 50L with no hybrid or refueling.DChemTech wrote: ↑18 Mar 2024, 09:49Why synth fuel? It has no future in road cars and there is much too little of it; it would just be greenwashing. Use synfuel for areas where alternatives are hardly available, like aviation.
And for f1, just use a bit of regular - and acknowledge that f1 is what it is, an entertainment product with no relevance for day to day automotive products. A sports that is a relic of the past, like archery, but can be entertaining nevertheless.
I care not for the green angle at this scale.
I have been thinking in this direction. You could have drastic changes every year, and new rules made available only in October.
won't official provision of the substantial sample of fuel at the end of each part of the race disrupt said race ?
I think that refueling and the removal of limits on powertrains, gearboxes, etc. would change Formula 1 for the better. In my opinion, the effects would only be positive if you ignore the costs. Refueling would open up a lot of strategic possibilities, especially with three tire compounds. That alone would provide more variation and not just undercut or overcut, the other one covers so that nothing happens... the lifting of the restrictions would ensure that the teams would have to go to the limit again and build engines that deliver maximum power for 350 km, which would bring reliability back into play. And last but not least - the drivers would have to drive at the absolute limit all the time in the race again, which would lead to more mistakes. Today, drivers are not really driving at their limit or the limit of the car, it's about getting the best possible performance out of the tires. The tires and how the car and driver use them are the deciding and limiting factors and so Formula 1 is about who can slow down the fastest. But in my opinion that's the wrong approach because I personally want to see drivers who are on the razor's edge and ultimately it's about having the best vehicle control and not about who can "manage" best. And it's also more spectacular when drivers have to drive at the absolute limit all the time instead of just 80 or 85% like they do today. And I think that's what F1 should be about - which driver has the best car control and is the fastest! But in the end this only becomes apparent when the drivers have to drive at the absolute limit all the time in the race and not when they "manage" 90% of the time and don't drive at the limit. But that's my personal opinion, which I don't think is that wrong. Because it's only at the limits of the car that you really see which driver has superior vehicle control and can move it the fastest.Baulz wrote: ↑13 Mar 2024, 20:15More frequent and significant rule changes would spice things up.
The problem with budget cap, wind tunnel restrictions, and no testing it is really hard if not impossible for a team to catch up. Red Bull got an advantage just like Mercedes with the engines and will maintain that advantage due to restrictions.
Agree, but is that really solvable?