bhall II wrote:Andres125sx wrote:But some people think it´s not proved dirty air is the problem. Yes Bhall, I´m refering to you
This is like someone with worn out tires on his car causing aquaplanning frequently, but instead of putting new tires he think avoiding puddles is enough to keep those tires. That is FIA with current aero rules, instead of solving the problem, they try to go around it with DRS, artificial crappy tires, etc. but the problem will continue there until they face it.
That's because no one has put forth a compelling case that shows how wake turbulence is more than just an incidental hindrance to overtaking.
Well, when cars grip is mainly dependant on aero I wouldn´t say wake turbulence reducing that grip is incidental. It´s the main problem in my eyes
Wich is completely different to your assertion. There´s no need to fully understand the dynamics of overtaking to know something is being harmful.
You don´t need to fully understand how the brain works to know drugs are harful for it
bhall II wrote:Since the only surefire way to address such a problem would be to stop aerodynamic development entirely, thus fundamentally altering the DNA of the sport
No, they (FIA) could hire some aerodynamicist to work on that while F1 continue his path. Not an instant solution, but at least it would put some hope to see it solved in some time, contrary to current situation where they continue groping in the dark
James Allison could be the solution, but that would need someone at FIA thinking with the brain, wich is quite unlikely
bhall II wrote:I think we need a whole lot more than just circumstantial confirmations supported by anecdotal evidence.
Drivers complaining about his car becoming drastically slower/unbalanced when in dirty air is not circumstantial or anecdotal, it is first hand experience. If we don´t fully understand the dynamics of overtaking (theory), we should at least pay some attention to real world experiece, shouldn´t we?
bhall II wrote:Given larger tires,
the end of "designed to degrade" compounds, wider track-widths, and F1's usual limousine-like wheelbases, next season will feature mechanical grip for days - likely the most stable chassis in racing history - and overtaking will fall dramatically because of it, and it will occur despite aerodynamic packages that will be a hair's breadth away from the full-on venturi tunnel concept most everyone seems to think is the silver bullet. The perception of the drop will be magnified by the historically high rate of overtaking this year, and people will bitch and bitch and bitch and...
Personally I´m not impressed at all with current overtaking numbers. Actually DRS overtakes are not
real overtakes to me. Well, they are of course, but overtakes must not exist only to allow cars passing each other, they must exist also to provide some excitement in the race, some battles, and DRS overtakes provide zero excitement, nill, nada, rien, null
bhall II wrote:But, the cars will also be unbelievably quick, and I can't wait!
Agree with this, I´m curious about how much FIA will miss the target, as I´m sure cars will be much faster than those few seconds improvement they were aiming