When you pull G in an aircraft, you still have to support your head... I've had the experience.Andres125sx wrote:Agree with the reasoning, but disagree with the conclusionMOWOG wrote: A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, men with huge cajones used to engage in racing like this. But then, the automobile evolved to the point where they were too powerful and too fast for any racing circuit.And that's when racing changed. From that point forward, a racer could not just bring the fastest car possible to the track and let 'er rip.The speed of the cars had to be managed and that's when racing stopped being racing and became "an entertainment product".
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I agree the problem started when F1 cars were too powerful and too fast, but not only for any circuit, but also for the drivers. F1 not only reached track limits, also human limits. 6g turns are simply too much. Aircraft pilots can take around 10-12g, but that´s completely different because they only suffer vertical forces, they can´t "turn" sideways like a car, so they don´t have to hold their body and head. They only need to worry about the blood reaching his head, but F1 drivers have to hold their head (and helmet) sideways, and at 6g turns that´s a lot of kg to hold with your neck, specially for 2 continuous hours
I think I read some years ago a driver faint may be possible due to the fatigue and that obviously can´t be a possibility, so from that point cars simply can´t be faster... at least while a driver is inside![]()
So the regulations need to limit cars potential, and since the cars evolve during the seassons, from time to time regulations need to put a lower limit banning new solutions (ground effect, EBD...), reducing the wings, etc. to keep them into the limits.
But I wouldn´t say that means F1 is an entertainment product, it´s the same as always, the only difference is engineers are limited to the regulations while some time ago they were free to test any new idea. For drivers it´s the same, nothing changed, they have to make the most of the car they drive and beat the rivals, so the racing itself is the same
In the future I´m sure we´ll see a new competition with automated cars, or cars driven remotely. Then we will see what´s the max potential of a car with current technology, but if we want to see drivers competing inside the car that simply is not possible
Back on Topic, I feel the cars have gotten slower since 2004, but they aren't that much off. I don't reckon we'll see GP2 cars that are faster than F1 cars next year.
I'm pretty disappointed that it gets slower when they change the rules, but that's just how it goes, it's a shame we don't get racing improvements that aren't artificial to go with it.