+1 why on earth he went with mechanical connections for energy recovery is beyond me. It's a real shame casue the rest of the concept deserved to be given a red hot go.PlatinumZealot wrote:It was Ben Bowlby's poor management that caused it I would say. If he went with an electric KERS the team might have done better. There was too much risk in racing that Flybrid kers and mechanically driving the rear wheels.
Afaik it was a management decision. I can remember it reading somewhere that Torotrak made all kinds of promises about their hybrid systems.PlatinumZealot wrote:It was Ben Bowlby's poor management that caused it I would say. If he went with an electric KERS the team might have done better. There was too much risk in racing that Flybrid kers and mechanically driving the rear wheels.
Agreed. Sounds to me like they were seriously understaffed. I'm fairly certain Porsche, Audi and Toyota all have way more employees involved in their LMP projectWilliamsF1 wrote:I find it amazing that a manufacturer backed lmp1 programme had just 40 people in it; in comparison Manor team by far the smallest in F1 has around 150 people.
If anything I'd say the current rules actually promoted the opportunity for something "different" (I prefer "different" since "innovative" to me means "new and better"; this wasn't better); it was a restriction in the amount of rear-end downforce that led BB down the road of thinking a front bias to the mass and tyre footprint would be beneficial... If the rules were totally free I think it's clear what configuration the cars would take; you only have to look through the development of F1 cars from 1950 to the 1990's to see what configuration "natural selection" would result in.bill shoe wrote: Overall, the LMP-1 exercise was frustrating to watch because it confirmed that creativity and new thinking could not find a new niche within the current rule set. I don’t see this as a positive outcome.
I can not resist the feeling "Nissan's strong commitment to motorsports" ends when when it comes to back it up with investments.WilliamsF1 wrote:I find it amazing that a manufacturer backed lmp1 programme had just 40 people in it; in comparison Manor team by far the smallest in F1 has around 150 people.(...)
Well, yea, good point. The ideal situation is to find a new approach within more of a "natural selection" framework. The new approach would not necessarily be something crazy like a front-engine front-drive configuration. I think there is lots of room for natural innovation if current tight rules were loosened up.machin wrote:
If anything I'd say the current rules actually promoted the opportunity for something "different" (I prefer "different" since "innovative" to me means "new and better"; this wasn't better); it was a restriction in the amount of rear-end downforce that led BB down the road of thinking a front bias to the mass and tyre footprint would be beneficial... If the rules were totally free I think it's clear what configuration the cars would take; you only have to look through the development of F1 cars from 1950 to the 1990's to see what configuration "natural selection" would result in.
dmjunqueira wrote: My biggest disappointment is that they didn't manage to get KERS working.
IMHO the outcome of this history could be very different if they did.
Well Porsche managed to do that. And the 8MJ battery system was a great advantage to them.WilliamsF1 wrote:dmjunqueira wrote: My biggest disappointment is that they didn't manage to get KERS working.
IMHO the outcome of this history could be very different if they did.
I am not sure
Nissan target was some 1000 hp KERS; hence they went for the mechanical system
A battery system for 8 MJ would have been 50 kgs,
Electronics 20 kgs
MGU 125 kgs with the current estimate of 8KW/kg
Not sure if a 200 kg system would have any benifit