Yes I agree about infinite twiddling with areo parts, also agree with your LMP1 train of thought, I would like to include Formula e as a beacon for appliying race tech to road car distilation.WhiteBlue wrote:That's a fine sentiment but I'm more with Baretzky's school of thought. Race cars should be exciting and have mind boggling performance and next in line they should provide the manufacturers with a platform to develop the finest technologies that they will later use in their road cars. LMP1 is currently following this kind of philosophy and that is what it makes it so exciting for the technically minded and the engineers. F1 will regret their short-sightedness of pumping all the money into refining arcane bits of carbon fibre panels. If you provide manufacturers a nice platform they will bring tons of money and excitement to the sport. If you deny them any competitive advantage by doing a good job you will be left with geeky technology that nobody has any interest in. Technical forums like this will be populated by armchair aerodynamicists that have no idea of a Bernoulli equation and fanbois will fill the pages of this forum with their drivel.caretaker wrote:F1 should never have been considered relevent to the wider car industry, it's in no way relevent ! ordinary men should be looking in wonder at those beasts, not nodding sagely and confirming to the wife that "our merc's got that on too".
But I gotta disagree when speaking of F1, I was 13 in 1992 and as i became properly interested in Grand prix the major factor for me was the unatainability of the thing, The tech at the time was awsome given computational constictions and I was hooked, Even when Mclaren launched the F1 road car and proclaimed It's a f1 car for the road, We all know it just wasn't
F1 needs to be exotic, exclusive and expensive, Cause kids now just walk past the tv, We need them to turn heads and say WHAT was that !.
We are way past warning"F1 may become just another race series".
So sorry to go so far O.T