ME4ME wrote: ↑29 Mar 2017, 21:27
I think a lot of fans dont care about the amount of fuel, or at what rate it is used. People just get annoyed or disappointed by fuel saving and/or lack of impressive sound.
ERS is also something that comes from the manufacturs rather than the fans. It doens't really add to the sport, on the contrary, it has created a void in performance between manufacturers and has driven up the costs of the current units.
I think the most simple way forward, if manufacturers can be convinced to give up "road relevance" to some extent, is a larger displacement V6 Turbo. The annual price should be capped at a sustainable number. Fuel flow rate and fuel budget limits can be left undefined, instead a maximum boost pressure can be put in place.
Ross Brawn is all about prioritising what the fans actually care about and keep the rest cheap and simple. I hope he can convince the manufacturers to cooperate.
Why would a boost limit be more acceptable to fans than a fuel flow limit? Both seek to do the same thing - ie, limit power. In fact a boost limit would likely need another limit - such as rpm limit - to really control power.
Why would the V6 need to be of greater capacity? The V6Ts of the 1980s peaked at 850-900hp in race trim. They were 1.5l. The current V6Ts would make 750-800hp without the ERS. Just tweak the fuel flow limit to get the desired power range.
Fuel saving could be eliminated by ending the race fuel limit. Even so, on the evidence of last weekend, it seems tyre saving has been the greater part of what fans have been complaining about the past few years. And most races this year will require no fuel saving or minimal fuel saving.
A price cap for engine supply will almost certainly be part of the next engine regulations. As it was for most of the 2.4l V8 era.
The problem about prioritising what the fans want is that not all fans want the same things. Many fans were drawn to F1 because of the technology - cheap and simple may not appeal to them. I know it certainly won't to me.
I see that Liberty are fans of a budget cap. I can see an ulterior motive for that - if they control the costs that way they may be able to pay the teams less and thus take more out of the sport for themselves.