They'll also need to stengthen the whole deal since the engine got destroyed by running it that high in revs. But still possible.mikeerfol wrote:Remember that thing Renault did after the 2013 Brazil race where they revved the engines without any limiter at all? That's when they reached 22k rpm.
Sure, engine freeze put pay to that.turbof1 wrote:They probably can by current technology.Juzh wrote:V8s never revved to 22k.Harsha wrote:I think V8 with 2006 rules and developing them from 22K Rpm limit and from that point making them fuel efficient will be so good see with current state of development.
There's no denying that the PU regulations have a crazy complexity created by obsessive geeks and mavericks simply because they can. Also a lot of PU engineers will have had fun spending stupid amounts of R&D money because they can. That's what's led to an arms race that is unsustainable for the customer teams.GitanesBlondes wrote:In your opinion it fits that image.Richard wrote:The F1 brand was built on a perception of exotica such as carbon fibre and beryllium. A sense of crazy complexity created by obsessive geeks and mavericks simply because they can. The current PU perfectly fits that image.
Kind of hard to fit that image when the design parameters were so strict that it forced everyone into the same funnel for the most part. They didn't create these engines in a "simply because they can" manner...if they did, they'd be putting out outrageous power numbers for starters.
If i remember correctly, the Renault guy predicted 22k and 860 horses if development was free.turbof1 wrote:They'll also need to stengthen the whole deal since the engine got destroyed by running it that high in revs. But still possible.mikeerfol wrote:Remember that thing Renault did after the 2013 Brazil race where they revved the engines without any limiter at all? That's when they reached 22k rpm.
Because the people who control the sport are bat-sh*t-crazy and all have there own agenda...?goonerf1 wrote:I think adopting the WEC's "Equivalence of Performance" rules is the way forward.
If Renault and Merc want to stick to these current crop of expensive hybrid engines, let them.
If Toyota want to join with their 3.7l V8 with ERS front and rear axle + supercapacitor, let them.
Same for Audi, Porsche, Nissan etc. Whatever suits your companies agenda.
Even if you want to run one of the older, cheaper, N/A V8's or 10's, why should you not be allowed to?
F1 is way too restrictive in my view.
Straight off the bat, the WEC got their calculations pretty close this year for LMP1 with a gap of just 0.3 in qualifying, so the FIA Technical Delegate would have absolutely no excuse for not doing the same.
Any reasons why this wouldn't work?
That's the reason why this will not work (or for that matter any other sufficient change). They'll fight over lolly pops when one is greener then the other.sectionate wrote:Because the people who control the sport are bat-sh*t-crazy and all have there own agenda...?goonerf1 wrote:I think adopting the WEC's "Equivalence of Performance" rules is the way forward.
If Renault and Merc want to stick to these current crop of expensive hybrid engines, let them.
If Toyota want to join with their 3.7l V8 with ERS front and rear axle + supercapacitor, let them.
Same for Audi, Porsche, Nissan etc. Whatever suits your companies agenda.
Even if you want to run one of the older, cheaper, N/A V8's or 10's, why should you not be allowed to?
F1 is way too restrictive in my view.
Straight off the bat, the WEC got their calculations pretty close this year for LMP1 with a gap of just 0.3 in qualifying, so the FIA Technical Delegate would have absolutely no excuse for not doing the same.
Any reasons why this wouldn't work?
I agree. That's how we end up with teams spending hundreds of millions on trying to exploit tiny variations in the hope of finding an advantage. So the designers have to get more and more obsessive about tiny details - for example spending umpteen manhours tweaking a tiny FW endplate because that's just about the only thing they can vary.GitanesBlondes wrote:Not really Richard. It has nothing to do with obsessive geeks and mavericks.
The regulations are what they are because they were intended to try and prevent anyone from finding a loophole anywhere. Nowadays, the regulations are written with the intent on banning nearly every last possible thing that might allow anyone to gain an engineering advantage. There's very little diversity to be had any longer.
The more stringent the regulations become, the less chance there is of finding cost-effective engineering solutions.
If the only solution is an expensive one, then everyone is forced to pursue the expensive one instead of a cheaper alternative that may exist because the regulations dictate it must be so.
There hasn't been any arms race on the engine side of things.
It's a low tech "formula", but I assure you it's absolutely cutting edge in end delivery and R&D sophistication. Kurt Busch's car post 2007 Michigan race impound made 839 RWHPGitanesBlondes wrote: Here's the bigger point too Richard, NASCAR has never claimed to be a true cutting edge series, which is what F1 has been claiming to be for awhile. You should try going to a race, the pushrod V8's are not technologically cutting edge, but at least they add the sound aspect
Exactly.drivinhard wrote:It's a low tech "formula", but I assure you it's absolutely cutting edge in end delivery and R&D sophistication. Kurt Busch's car post 2007 Michigan race impound made 839 RWHPGitanesBlondes wrote: Here's the bigger point too Richard, NASCAR has never claimed to be a true cutting edge series, which is what F1 has been claiming to be for awhile. You should try going to a race, the pushrod V8's are not technologically cutting edge, but at least they add the sound aspecton a dynojet (the highest of all cars tested). If you think building a 900 hp 2 valve, carbureted, 358 ci NA motor that makes that kind of power and lasts for 500 miles @ WOT isn't cutting edge, think again.
http://www.epi-eng.com/piston_engine_te ... _to_f1.htm
I have a colleague who travels quite a bit and found himself once in an airport lounge in the Middle East. Frank Williams happened to be in the same lounge and they got to talking. It turns out, Sir Frank was astounded to learn that there were a lot of Formula One fans in America!F1 doesn't know what the consumer wants