Not really its just I only got half way through your seemingly endless post and it didnt seem to be going anywhere, so I couldnt bring myself to finish it. As I havent read it i wasnt in a position to comment.WhiteBlue wrote:Is everybody speechless or what?
If someone sees an advantage in that solution I hope they don't make it mandatory. It could fit into a formula libre of 1.5-1.8 L with fuel load limit. This would allow the refinement of existing V6 engines but also development of I-4s. In that case I would put money on the I-4.xpensive wrote:If they want to go turbo, chop off two cylinders, just like they did with the V10s earlier, make them mildly boosted 1.8 V6s,that way perhaps the engine builders don't have to begin completely from scratch?
I thought that methanol is a safety issue. You cannot see the flames and that makes the fuel unsuitable for racing. If they move away from the current petrol/bio fuel mix I expect a move towards HCCI ready petrol.xpensive wrote:If you add a metahol-pwoered fuel limit, flow or total, and unlimited use of KERS, F1 might be going somewhere.
You realy should ask the people who live around the Gulf of Mexico what they think is or is not an 'ethical' fuel xpensive.xpensive wrote:Methanol has been used for ages in CART and in NHRA, with multiple pitstops at that. Besides, methanol from cellulose is a far more ethical fuel than ethanol made from various eatable crops.
I'm aware of that but that does not mean that F1 would be satisfied with the safety of methanol. F1 used it long ago in the past and my understanding is they will not go back to something they have abandoned for safety reasons. CART as other US series have often taken more risks than F1.xpensive wrote:Methanol has been used for ages in CART and in NHRA, with multiple pitstops at that. Besides, methanol from cellulose is a far more ethical fuel than ethanol made from various eatable crops.
F1 until 1957 and GP racing in the pre war era. I do not make much difference there because F1 is really the continuation of the golden era.xpensive wrote:F1 used methanol and US series taking more risks? Do you make things up as you go, just to suit your current opinion?
There is little doubt that US racing is more risk friendly. None of the classic road tracks like Road America and Laguna Seca have an F1 rating, the ovals often exceeds the safe banking criteria of the FiA and US top motor sport has had more casualties than F1 in the last twenty years. But this isn't really the issue. The issue is the danger of the invisible flames of methanol.AtlasF1 wrote:Up until the end of 1957 it was possible to choose freely what fuel you used. Mercedes, for example, relied on the following recipe: 45% benzene, 25% methyl alcohol, 23% aviation fuel, 3% acetone and 2% nitrobenzene. The remaining two percent remain a secret until this day. The explosive mixture was so aggressive that remnants left over from training and races had to be drained off and the engine rinsed out with conventional petrol. This was the only way to prevent the engine from suffering damage overnight!
From 1958 to the end of 1960, teams were compelled to tank up with aviation fuel with an octane rating of 130, after their oil sponsors, above all Shell, had urged Formula One to stipulate a more usual form of petrol so that the product transfer between the fans and Formula One was more effective and more convincing and health protection guaranteed.
That may be true or not, I haven't read a serious study about it. I guess it would mainly depend on the economical and ecological balance. How much of the natural forrest would be wiped out for monoculture production of wood? If a high yield production method from non fossil sources is economically and technically feasible Bio Methanol will probably become main stream and F1 adopt it. As it stands we still use mainly diesel and petrol for some reason. It would not help F1 to use an elite "green" fuel that people at the gas station find unaffordable or unavailable.xpensive wrote:I believe that methanol from cellulose could give F1 the "green" image that seems to be so desireable from the FIA and parts of FOTA.