Obviously. But that doesn't mean FE has to fight against an incredibly well developed market.Andres125sx wrote:I don´t think so, you will never see Shell or Petronas sponsoring FE, but we could see Panasonic, A123, Sanyo... also Tesla or any other electric car manufacturerwesley123 wrote:It also couldn't, hard to say. Formula 1 has it's market dominance, Formula E has to fight against a well developed market, and it definitely will have a hard time doing so.Andres125sx wrote: I think it will be just the opposite, if it survive first seasson/s it could easlily overcome F1
And do you want to be the brand to take the risk to be the first? Many brands do not want to take this risk.Sponsors look for media impact, if a new electric competition suceed and people watch it, it wil be so diferent to any other competition only this will make it attractive for sponsors
For some reason?wesley123 wrote:Which is weird since they are around for quite some time now. Longer than people realize. Formula E's hype seems to be around the wish to have clean energy, and currently electric is the way people go for some reason. Once that clean energy hype dies down one could assume that so does Formula E's
Today, when a big part of the electricity comes from coal plants, electricity is cleaner than petrol, only taking electricity from coal plants wich are the most polluting way to produce electricity. Not by a huge margin, but cleaner. [/quote]
Which is where the chemicals of the batteries come in. They tend to be very bad for the environment, so in turn, it gains nothing. It only shifts the problem around.
I do. However, it was more of an example. My view on it is that many people do not realize that the electricity comes from those dirty plants. And to have a sufficient power supply for this increase in consumption we would need more power plants.At least if you consider the pollution produced by petrol before burning it too. If you´re including the pollution produced by electricity at the power plants, you have to include the pollution produced by oil wells, refineries, oil tankers and oil trucks that supply petrol stations
It's a reality fueled by hype. Do you think anyone would be bothered to buy such a short range car if they weren't promoted and hyped up in any way?Today it´s a solid 25-30%, and some months it´s even been over 50%, so sometimes we have used more clean electricity than polluting one. That´s reality, not any hype.
These cars have been around actively since 1997, and no one cared even a little bit back then. But now, when everyone is promoting an "clean" image, everyone wants to buy one.
So yes, it is all hype. After 17 years they still are still terribly unpractical. Their range is still lacking, and you'll gonna enjoy forgetting to charge it when you get back at home. They are now only popular because buyers can get a tax cut on their vehicle, their general price has dropped and because they want to follow the "clean energy" trend.
Sure, however there are more people in this world. Think people who don't like autosport, mothers with children, and do I know what not. The last thing you need as a startup is a PR-nightmareOr something really mindblowing, watching a race hearing the tires, how each driver brake and take the corners, hearing the aerodinamical sounds, and being able to comment the race with your friends.... I can´t find that forceful and annoyingwesley123 wrote: Having the street races in those big cities seems a good idea to have quite some exposure. But then there is an other issue, it shoves it down of people's throats. Having those cars zooming through your streets can be quite forceful and annoying.
It's hardly new. But instead of ICE's they now have batteries. Nothing new about that, and it has been done before.A1GP was another formula... like any other... GP2, GP3, F3, F3000, World Serieswesley123 wrote:A1GP was rather succesful, and where is that series now? A series cannot be ran on hopes and dreamsIf people can´t cope with a noiseless competition it will be now on first seasson when they won´t watch it, but if first seasson is a success because people realice racing is a lot more than engine noise , I don´t see how it could dissapear on next seassons
Too similar, too many competition for tv coverage, didn´t provide anything new. But FE is completely new, can´t be compared.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formula_Lightning
Which brings us back to the hype again...
Arguable, if I take a look at specs from a 1997 EV, I don't notice incredible differences. The only actual change seems to be weight and reliability.Battery technology isn´t new, but it´s now when it has evolved enough to make possible useful electric cars. I´m sure without lithium batteries Tesla Motors wouldn´t exist, nor the Lola-Drayson B12/69EV, or the FE itself.
Electric cars have been possible for way longer. No one cared about it back then. But now, with the whole environment friendly thing(Because if we don't we will all burn to death) it is a hot item.Not any hype, just technology reached the point where electric cars are possible, and this is just the beginning, wait for LiS batteries...
I can agree that that's an advantage.1- The torque curve is what ICE manufacturers are trying to match for more than a century... without success.
In exchange, we get batteries which by design don't have a very long lifespan(Take a look at your smartphone, you are lucky if the battery lasts 2 years, and in that time you'll notice some severe deterioration of battery life). With larger batteries this is somewhat less, but can still be an issue. Plus, batteries aren't very cheap.2- Reliability can´t be compared. Electric motors are virtually indestructible, they´re too simple and there´s no wearing at all apart from two bearings. No maintenance at all either, no oil changes, no turbo problems, gaskets failing, injector problems, fuel or oil pumps... Think about all the problems you´ve had with all your cars, and probably 60-70% of them where engine related. All of them will dissapear
Also, what happens with the old ones when they are switched out for new ones.
I agree that this is an advantage3- Lifespan will depend only on batteries because of the lack of wearing at the motor, they don´t get old or decrease the perfomance, the perform the same always, maintenance free and failures free. And next generation batteries will be around 70% cheaper than current ones, so a battery replacement won´t be a big investment, specially if you consider with a new battery you have a brand new power unit as the battery is the only part decreasing the perfomance with the use. Put a new battery and it will perform exatly the same than first day. So lifespan will be what the owner want it to be
I don't find it that great at all. Vibration wise it is an advantage. Sound is more of an issue than an advantage, for example; You can hardly hear the car coming as a pedestrian. Also, I personally find the feedback of an ICE to be of an importance.4- Ease of use and confort will be at a different league. Manufacturers do a big effort to avoid any noise and vibrations reaching the passengers, and they do a great job on some cases, but electric cars don´t provide any noise or vibration at all, so comfort in this aspect (noise and vibration isolation) will be at a different league.
On itself, yes, but disposal of batteries, plus creation isn't very environment friendly.5- Emissions are at a different league too as explained above if you make a fair comparison
I agree, this is an advantage. Lower CoG would be an advantage. Weight, it's not necessarily different. If you see that the engine from the Nissan ZEOD RC weighs only 46kg, then the same is possible with an ICE.6- Today they weight the same or even a bit more than ICE cars, but with next batteries they will be much lighter and with much better weight distribution as they can be placed lower and more centered than the block of an ICE, what will improve handling, breaking and overall perfomance
In contrast, so do other forms.And I´m probably forgeting something... not a hype at all IMHO, but real advantages
Yet, no one is watching from there. Is it even a market then?Singapore, Russia, India, Abu Dhabi... those look like some millions of new potential viewers.wesley123 wrote:F1 does not need to innovate. F1's issue is is that it has come to the point that everyone who is interested in watching is watching. There aren't many more potential viewers anymore(well, a few, but not a huge amount), so it has come to the point where growth is getting harder, and where the growth is mainly coming from income.
Because the market has very little growth in itself. And why are people not watching anymore? Do they prefer to watch soccer, or do they prefer to spend time with their families?But even with Bernie doing big efforts to... well, actually to stop the fall of the audience numbers, he can´t. So even with F1 going to new countries what should increase the audience, it´s decreasing
F1 has reached the point where it has reached maximum growth, and logical step then is to cash in on this market. Making F1 subscription based(Sky...) isn't really a move to make the market grow, but it is a move to generate money from the existing market, because those who want to watch will cough up the way too large fee.
Not really innovative at all, he is trying to appeal to the market that has no interest in watching F1. Couple that with an old guy trying to do so, and you get such idea's. Although, one has to admit they aren't much worse than having an 50hp boost to the one who gets the most tweets.F1 does need innovation, and that´s what Bernie think too, you just have to take a look at his ideas (sprinklers, double scoring at last gp, new countries with no F1 tradition at all, night races...). He´s not trying to leave the competition as it is, but trying to be innovative