5 to 10 times? Then 6 seconds is laughable. Imagine what the f1 teams could achieve with that same amount, but less restrictive rules.beelsebob wrote: Wow, both having a much harder problem to solve, and being 6 seconds a lap faster... that's pretty --- impressive!
They aren't allowed to develop the engine anymore after January, and quite possibly any engine development after next season, will be given to the manufacturers that have the weaker engine, just to catch up. It'll be another engine freeze, at best maybe a very strictly controlled engine development programme. Aero-wise teams are already on their top. 2009 atleast brought in some oppertunities with a bigger front wing. The coming batch of aero reg changes are all restrictions. I see them finding 1 second at the most. After that, teams will be spending tenths of millions to find not seconds, not tenths of a second, but merely hundreds of a second over a complete year.Even if this is the time they'd lose based on the current state of aero, we can then assume that they'll gain 1.5-2 seconds a lap just from getting better at designing cars from year to year. That leaves us at a 1 second time loss. Which is in the bounds of the normal lap time variation of F1. Give it a year after that and they'll be a second a lap faster than current cars, plus, the engines will have developed (which they're ofc not doing just now), and we can expect them to be significantly faster than this year already. I honestly wouldn't be surprised if they were already tightening up the regulations some more come 2015