As said elsewhere many many times (I think that coupled with the golf ball dimples the steel brakes are one of the most frequent proposals in forums...), with advance in modern technology for both steel brakes and pads the braking power, the stability of performance, wear rate, etc etc of current steel brakes are as good, if not better than the carbon/carbon ones, hence even if they adopted steel discs braking performance wouldn’t change at all. Besides, F1 braking ability is related more to grip (hence downforce) than to power of the braking system.
The only real reason teams use c-c brakes is that a carbon disc weighs less than 2 kg while a steel disc would be way more than twice that.
Anyway, in the current issue of Autosprint there are a few quotes from F1 people (MS, JPM, De la Rosa, Massa, Keke Rosberg, Frank Dernie and Patrick Head) about what would be needed to favour overtakes.
The interesting thing is that drivers (DlR, FM and Rosberg) mostly think that the reduction of downforce could be a solution, while engineers opinion is that downforce isn’t the problem.
I like particularly the opinion expressed by Frank Dernie, first because it confirms exactly what I wrote some months ago in a long post (it’s a typical feature of the human being appreciate people who share your opinion
); then because of the reference to wet races, I already heard from an ex-f1 engineer a couple of months ago the same reference and I consider it quite interesting :
my opinion is strictly personal, but I believe that in 25 years the only thing people wanted to do was to reduce the aerodynamic efficiency. Did we obtain more spectacular races that way ? I would say definitively no. The most enjoying and interesting races are the wet ones, and that should demonstrate that it’s the low mechanical grip, not the low aerodynamic grip, that favours overtakes. What we need in my opinion are harder tyres, with less grip. The CDG wing proposed by FIA never convinced me completely : in my opinion you can’t analyse completely its behaviour with studies and theoretical calculations. Anyway if we are thinking about the problem of turbulence in the wake, we have to remember that these are directly proportional to engine power. Hp are the only thing “dragging” the wing thru the air: if power goes down, also the turbulence diminishes. So with the introduction of the V8 the loss of downforce due to turbulence on the wake should be reduced.
Then I would also add Patrick Head quote :
People don’t realize how much the technical level of the F1 did improve. In old days, most of overtakes did happen because during the race the driver wasn’t able to maintain the same pace, brakes were losing efficiency, the gearbox was refusing gears... I find ingenuous by some people to say “give us back manual gearboxes and you’ll see spectacle again” If we had to design a similar transmission, nowadays it wouldn’t be as in the old days : it would be a perfect device, that doesn’t suffer failures during the race.