ChrisF1 wrote:So Karting, a spec formula, doesn't see overtaking?
ChrisF1 wrote:I find it absurd to suggest that cars of a similar pace won't overtake.
The difference between Formula One and spec-series/karting is that performance differentials in F1 tend to reflect firm hardware advantages that don't get tired or make mistakes. And as solutions/strategies naturally converge upon the optimum over time, the gaps become smaller as variation decreases. However, the gaps also become more difficult to overcome, because the decrease in variation also means the cars wind up with the same basic strengths and weaknesses. This has been borne out over the sport's history.
bhall II wrote:
From the year in which overtaking was at its "natural" zenith, 1984 French Grand Prix qualifying times:
From the doldrums of overtaking, qualifying times from the 2008 French Gran Prix:
The entire field for the 2008 race qualified within the same gap as the top-9 in 1984. But, because they had the same engines, which means they had more or less the same fuel consumption, which means they carried more or less the same fuel loads, which means they had more or less the same fuel strategies, the result is a situation that made overtaking very difficult.
Overtaking is performance differentiation in action.
(Note: I chose the French Grand Prix simply because I already had a screenshot of the 2008 times. As I'm only seeking to identify trends emblematic of the problem, I'm OK with the fact that they took place on different circuits and that I don't have any exact overtaking numbers. I'm quite quite certain that any similar, or more accurate, comparison will yield a similar result.)
That's why something like this...
SectorOne wrote:I´d rather just see them stick a spec-fan on the cars instead. Get rid of the wings and shift focus to low drag bodies instead.
All the talk of following another car-problems would stop immediately.
...would ultimately have little overall effect, because any change applied uniformly to all cars will naturally do nothing to either increase or decrease the performance differentials between them. It would just make the problem look different. (DRS works, because it only applies to the trailing car.)
Soapbox: I think the reason why overtaking is a problem is because there's simply no will to acknowledge that Formula One isn't necessarily compatible with copious overtaking. But, the arrogant personalities involved like to think they can do anything. So, we end up with a frustrating string of wildly expensive, artificial and/or ineffectual changes, as these Masters of the Universe try to prove, once and for all, that they alone can have their cake and eat it, too.
I suggested circuit alteration, because I think it's probably the most effective change that can be made to attack the "structural" problem of overtaking, and because it's a change that would not be subjected to F1 teams' natural, obsessive/expensive tendency to optimize everything.