turbof1 wrote:I think that shows the potentional of GE, doesn't it? I mean look how close they can drive one to another in the corners, with such ease!
Very impressive indeed! IMO the main reason for banning ground effect was two fold.
First they did not have run offs as we have nowadays on fast tracks. So component failures and other accidents with interruption of ground effect were causing fatal accidents.
Second they did not have a suitable way to curb excessive performance.
From 2014 onwards it will be very easy to curb excessive cornering performance and speed. You just take away more fuel flow from the engine and force designers to keep cutting drag from the aero configuration. It will simply become an issue of introducing the fuel cuts at a sensible point of the performance development. As this will happen we will see more ground effect and movable aerodynamic elements appear in F1.
F1 can still be the pinnacle of road racing but it will be much more sophisticated in terms of energy use. Performance will be generated with ever decreasing fuel use and more clever engineering.
There is very little doubt that you can today generate the performance of the 1987 cars with a third of the energy expenditure if you use clever aerodynamics. Ground effect, movable aero, flexible aero and adaptable aero will be the tools of such future developments.