winners= F1 fans and F1 in general
looser= Renault and WB
...is that a fair way to sum it up?
.December 2nd, 2010 and I'll be darned...who could have guessed?
But why? I still haven't read a decent explanation as to why the V6 will be so much better than the L4. Especially since the power, revs and capacity will remain the same. If anything the V6's will be heavier, bigger and more of a hindrence (when compared to L4's of the same spec/power/capacity)Holm86 wrote:Thats good news for me. The only thing in the new engine regulations i didnt like was that it had to be 4 cylinders.
I don't like my posts being buried at the bottom of a page, and it's a genuine technical question of interest. [-o<King Six wrote:But why? I still haven't read a decent explanation as to why the V6 will be so much better than the L4. Especially since the power, revs and capacity will remain the same. If anything the V6's will be heavier, bigger and more of a hindrence (when compared to L4's of the same spec/power/capacity)Holm86 wrote:Thats good news for me. The only thing in the new engine regulations i didnt like was that it had to be 4 cylinders.
This is f1technical, explanations on a postcard!
If you come back to me with "the sound" then leave your membership at the door.
I think sound is a fair opinion. And the fact that Ferrari doesn´t need or care about what technology they can get from 4potters in F1.King Six wrote:But why? I still haven't read a decent explanation as to why the V6 will be so much better than the L4. Especially since the power, revs and capacity will remain the same. If anything the V6's will be heavier, bigger and more of a hindrence (when compared to L4's of the same spec/power/capacity)
This is f1technical, explanations on a postcard!
If you come back to me with "the sound" then leave your membership at the door.
X, I'd say that's Mpressive , also congrats on not having to 'eat an entire Caterham vehicle'xpensive wrote:December 2nd, 2010 and I'll be darned...who could have guessed?WhiteBlue wrote:According to Scarbs it will be an L4 with 37.7 cc/s if my figuring isn't too far off.xpensive wrote:Anyway, my final predictions for 2013is the following;
A 1.6 liter turbo-V6 restricted to 12 kRpm, as well as a 2.0 Bar boost (3.0 absolute) and a fuelflow of 45 cc/second.
Exactlyandrew wrote:...I don't believe for 1 minute that Ferrari alone brought about this change but I guess if you have an extreme allergy to Ferrari then pigs can fly.
...
=D> Thank Valhalla that you have avoided the dreaded Xcessive humility! =D>xpensive wrote:Can't help myself from rolling around in my own humble clairvoyance, let's do this one more time,December 2nd, 2010;
WhiteBlue wrote:According to Scarbs it will be an L4 with 37.7 cc/s if my figuring isn't too far off.xpensive wrote:Anyway, my final predictions for 2013is the following;
A 1.6 liter turbo-V6 restricted to 12 kRpm, as well as a 2.0 Bar boost (3.0 absolute) and a fuelflow of 45 cc/second.
what´s your reasoning/technical explaination behind this statements?King Six wrote: .......
If anything the V6's will be heavier, bigger and more of a hindrence (when compared to L4's of the same spec/power/capacity)
Just want to go back to this. I have done a bit of digging and have found that Ferrari were not the only team to voice their concerns. In fact Mercedes had voiced concerns and Cosworth had asked for clarification. It is also worth noting that Renault were the only engine manufacturer to support the 4 cylinder format.WhiteBlue wrote:You can be very proud to predict that Ferrari would force F1 into such an idiotic decision, but it remains to be seen if you fuel flow prediction materialises. The V6 may not be able to meet the target that was set for the I4. I'll be interested to learn what will happen there.
http://en.espnf1.com/f1/motorsport/story/52022.html"We want clarity," Cosworth boss Mark Gallagher told GP Week. "If it's a 1.6-litre motor, fine, we'll be there. If not, we've got a V8 that we can continue with. We're agnostic. We don't have to have a V8 or V12 or an in-line four. If the F1 rules required a single-cylinder two-stroke, we'd be there. The FIA president has said he's listening and taking in everything we're saying. We just want a resolution.
"There's a big concern on our side because the new rules have no cost restrictions applied," Gallagher added. "So the manufacturers can spend a huge amount of money and we would have a space race around the new engine formula, which was never the idea.
"Everyone agreed that wasn't the idea, but unfortunately that's what happened. So we've also said to the FIA that a delay might be the right thing to do. I think all the teams, not just our customers, don't need to be spending more money on engine technology."
For those who never pay attention I will explain it all again. The new engines hinge on the presence of Cosworth as an independant supplier and a profitable business. Without Cosworth the manufacturers would fall back into a spending war that only benefits Ferrari. They are a team with almost limitless resources compared to a small high tech firm like Cosworth. Cosworth are happy to develop any engine if the budgets or resources are limited. That was the plan that everybody agreed to in September 2010. Then the WMSC decided on the I4 configuration that was also agreed by Ferrari in the expert group. They did not like it but they said they would respect the decision. Some days later Montezemolo announced that he would try to overthrow the plan. From that day no word was heared about the resource restrictions for engines any more. Obviously Ferrari refused to sign an agreement as part of their plan to torpedo the I4.andrew wrote:Seriously, can you demonstrate that Ferrari were behind this? Do you reasonably think that one team was enough to change the proposed engine format? Why do you dislike Ferrari so much?WhiteBlue wrote:You can be very proud to predict that Ferrari would force F1 into such an idiotic decision, but it remains to be seen if you fuel flow prediction materialises. The V6 may not be able to meet the target that was set for the I4. I'll be interested to learn what will happen there.
Surely a V6 engine is far more relevant to road going vehicle technology than an I4?