747heavy wrote:it´s an interesting concept Ringo, I´m still a bit undecided if I like it or not, but I can see some merrit in it.
I´m just not sure, if I have understood it correctly. Do you deicde the amount of KERS power after qualifying (reverse grid) or dynamic during the race?
Let´s say XXX is on pole and get´s 60kW to start with, then he spins in lap 5, the whole filed dives by before he can rejoin. Does he now has still his 60kW or does he now has the max 120kW or whatever?
Yes the grid is not physically reversed. The cars keep their qualified position.
The KERS power is decided after qualifying just for the grid start. As positions change during the race so will the KERS power.
The grid allocation is simply based on position, not any crooked means of devaluing pole position.
In fact from a safety point of view, it may be better to wait after lap one to allocate the power. A grid start could end up with 10 cars going for the same corner. We can save that kind of thing when the race is under way at lap 2.
The Power is not permanently limited, all cars keep the capability to fully charge the batteries, only the power output is limited based on the car's instantaneous position. This can be done electronically. There is no physical handicap such as extra ballast or less battery cells.
As the car's position changes on track, so does the amount of power it can discharge. It is dynamic. No condemnation to any one top team.
The minimum power is 60kW, P1 will have this amount.
So in the event a driver leads the race, has the minimum 60kW of KERS power then spins out to lose five places, his car now has 67.5 kW or whatever graduation of power that is sensible x 5. He wont have the full 120kW, the man at the back of the grid will have 120kW.
This system is impartial to the quality of the cars, it's based solely on position during the race. If a dominant ferrari messes up qualifying to start at the back or gets a penalty during the race and loses a bunch of places, he gets what's allotted to his new position.
Don't pay too much attention to the actual power figures i mention though. It's the distribution of power in regards to position that is important.
P1 could have 120kW at his disposal while P24 has 240kW. It just has to be a range where a system of P24's allotted power (the maximum allowed) can be carried by all cars. The working groups could analyze and decide what are sensible power divisions, minimum and maximum.
The KERS batteries on all the cars are the same capacity, just that all but P24 may be able to use the full rate of discharge for the race. Seeing as though the back marker has the maximum power.
The race will be like crabs in a barrel. No more cruising and relaxing, it just wont be possible with a back marker having 160 more horsepower than you. You climb to the top, it's not over till the checkered flag drops.
And for those who think this is just a method to cheapen the sport. It can't be any more blatant than an adjustable wing and deployment zones. This is an opportunity for actual racing to carry on up to the last meter of a race in F1.
Call it hollywood action flick since the drivers are getting payed like movie stars anyway; but I want to see racing in F1.