machin wrote:just read through the rules again and I can't see anything that prohibits planetary gearboxes in F1 unless I'm mistaken... so Auto, if they're so much better, why don't they use them already? What is causing the teams to use (in your opinion) "inferior" technology?
I know this will sound like an old record and sour grapes, I hope you will see through it and find the truth for yourselves.
Ferrari (as just one example but probably the most obvious)have stated in public that ALL their future road cars will be hybrid.
They have to be, because even though Ferrari can use the Fiat 500 as part of the CO2 calculation, there is no way a V12 ic engined Ferrari will be allowed into a European Town or City in the future with its engine running. The regulations just wont allow it to happen.
Ferrari have what they believe is a modern powertrain with electric motors and the latest (state of the art) layshaft gearboxes. They believe this is the future for their hybrid range. I think it is the PAST using obsolete geartrain design and first generation electric motor and control systems technology.
The designs look like a hugely complex block of flats.
Other 'supercar' manufacturers are following suit because they are being forced to do so by the regulations, not because they consider hybrid or electric traction as the future, which it is and they should.
This attitude permeates to all levels of vehicle manufacture and the attitude it produces in the general public is the cause of the huge delay in the transition to hybrid and electric vehicles and the cost reductions that should by now have created a level playing field in the market and might even have had a major effect in repairing the financial base of some fossil based economies.
F1 is an 'old boys network'. It might appear to be high technology and it certainly uses the latest techniques and sciences but only when these disciplines suit its financial base.
The ONLY technology given almost a free reign in F1 is aero.
All other areas of F1 potential development are strangled by FIA regulations and any meaningful development or diversity is very effectively prevented.
Energy recovery has been added but only within very exact definitions. There is little area available for new ideas if at all and for anyone with new ideas the risk is not worth taking because anything that looks like a potential breakthrough is always banned before it has a chance. A look into F1 history will prove this without doubt. F1 cars are designed today by a commitee of regulators.
No gearbox company or car manufacturer is prepared to fund a completely new geartrain concept that they know will be outlawed before it races and they sure as hell do not want a new system in road production that will make their current stuff obsolete over night. Far easier to suppress the idea when ever it appears.
In this case it even extends to certain other tech forums when it rattles their OBN and upsets their childish status quo. They dare not even speak its name.