ISLAMATRON wrote:eventually, given a specified displacement, all the teams will converge on 1 design configuration and F1 has allways had a specified engine diplacement.
An open displacement formula is not something based in reality, speeds & costs must be held in check on F1 today.
A 2L turbo engine with 4 cylinders and 4 valves per head, leave it up to the manufacterers if they want DI, VVT, or whatever, 10 engines per season, must sell their engines for 5 mil per season or hopefully less. mandate an amount of fuel or energy.
max power in qual but 10 engines per season stops the dedicated qually engines, fuel limit regulates power in race and hopefully encourages teams to make the cars with less drag. unlimited KERS sold to any team for 1.5 mil
Islam is right. I would tweak the figures slightly but the basic principle is correct. Instead of 2 L it should be 1.5L and the basic cylinder pitch of the GRE to get a wider manufacturer base.
Instead of 10 engines it should be five engines per year as already targeted by FOTA and the price should be 3 mil $ per year.
Unlimited KERS for 1.5 mil $ per year is ok but the supply of the whole homologated power train inclusive KERS should be mandated. The much more important developments are supposed to come from KERS and manufacturers must supply the total power train to all customers exactly as they use them in their own team. No backward specs for customer teams.
Limited fuel per race is also OK but the limit should be low enough to make excessive drag prohibitive. Ideally fuel should be so much restricted that cars should reach 350 km/h top speed with just 200 kW instead of 650 KW. I would allow movable and adaptive aerodynamics to achieve that figure. I would not limit the power under the 650 kW they run now but by the fuel limit they would not be able to waste it on drag as they do today.
Today an F1 car uses approximately 2L per minute and 180L per race. The vast majority of that fuel is used to produce downforce and drag. I would say that they need to cut the fuel allowance to 90L or less. The power at full speed should be tested and if it exceeds 200 kW the fuel limit should be further reduced.
With such a formula passing would not be an issue. Drivers would pass all the time to get into the slipstream and save fuel. The decisive moves would clearly come in the last minutes of the race when the leaders fight it out. To make the fight even more interesting I would carry a reserve fuel tank with 5L of fuel that should prevent cars to totally run out. If a car goes on reserve before the checkered flag a bright red light would go on so that all competitors know this car is out of fuel. The driver would be required to drive like a car one lap down and he would receive a 10 place penalty in the classification.