So we all get frustrated at times with the excessive regulations that we see in all racing series, particularly F1. People are disappointed with cars that must have the same number of cylinders, same tyres, same fuel flow, etc. There are two reasons the regulators point to justify restrictions:
1- By banning materials/technology, they hope to lower the cost and make the series more attractive to teams.
2 - Safety: sometimes cars can get too fast and not safe enough, have too much cornering speed, etc.
I think reason #1 has been proved to be a mistake. It actually causes the opposite effect:when you have too much regulations, you force teams to fight for little marginal improvements on existing technologies, which is always costly. By contrast, if you have very permissive regulations, you allow someone to come up with a different idea, such as double deck diffuser, F-duct, fan car, etc, and gain an advantage due to creativity rather than money.
There's also the fact that, if people (sponsors) are willing to throw money at racing teams, why restrict that? It's not like the money comes from the taxpayers. So they should just let teams spend whatever they want.
Now, reason #2 is of course legitimate, and that's where my idea kicks in: what if we did away with safety concerns? that's of course impossible if we want people to risk their lives in a car, but what if we use R/C cars?
By R/C i don't mean the regular toys you see on nano tracks, parking lots, etc. I was thinking about using a car with onboard cameras, that would be driven by someone in a racing cockpit in a cabin, similar to those used in videogames. The driver would see the onboard cockpit angle from the cameras, and would have controls just like in a car (instead of regular R/C controls we see).
These cars would race in real tracks, such as Monaco, Interlagos, Laguna Seca, etc.
Also the cars would be full sized, or close to that. This would allow them to be easily seem by spectators, and also to have big engines.
Now, think about all the benefits.
1- No driver means less weight
2 - no driver means engine can be moved forward to allow better weight distribution
3 - no driver means no crumble zones, survival cell, roll loop, etc, so cars are even lighter.
4 - Since we need not worry about g force causing the driver to get uncounscious, we can develop all kind of crazy ground effects car pulling several G of lateral force.
5 - Old tracks that are deemed too dangerous can be used, like the Nordschleife.
6 - Less cost with medical crew, racing suit, helmet, etc, so more money can go into car development.
As for the regulations, i was thinking there could be none at all. I mean. Even car size, weight, fuel limits, engine type, could be all free. I think the only regulation would be requiring cars to use tyre traction, lest someone would try a jet powered car, or something. And if the optimal design turned out to be too small, there could be a minimum size regulation too. But other than that, it should be free. Six wheeled cars, two stroke engines, whatever.
what do you guys think?