If it was relevant to the real world I'd also be happy. My argument is that with the restrictive rules and a planned freeze there is no possibility of any relevance or cross-over of technology occurring. The only relevance now is symbolic and the teams are straining to sustain the development costs.WhiteBlue wrote: It is absolutely legitimate in my view to spend money on power train development in order to keep F1 relevant to the world outside of the 20 races it does each season. There is so much money being wasted on aerodynamics that have no use in the real world outside of F1. I' very happy that this excesses are a little bit rebalanced towards spending on more sensible technologies. I think it is even more important to limit the aero research and the speed of new aero parts being introduced by a homologation scheme like the one we have on the power train side unless of course the team budgets get capped in a sensible way.
For what its worth, I'd happily welcome a restriction on aero rules and an opening up of chassis and powertrain rules. Then the motorsport industry could be capable of paying more than just lip service to the automotive industry. I hope at least Formula E goes down this path.
You have a technical background WB. Do you really think that, with an impending freeze, the new powertrains in F1 are going to have any positive effect on road car development?