1. Please god no.UlleGulle wrote: ↑04 Apr 2017, 07:25Formula One, and motor sport in general has three great problems. The first are spiraling costs and the second is road relevance. The third is tight rules and teams converging on specific technical solutions, making the series looking more or less like a one-supplier-formula.
We can argue all year about which sort of engine has the best legacy/sound/technical future. I suggest we let the teams fight it out on track.
My humble proposal for a new regulation would be the following:
1. The engine block, pistons, rods and crank must be pulled of the line of a road car assembly. Manufacturers may change the material of pistons, rods and crank to a set of materials approved, but are not allowed to change their design.
2. This engine must be a part of a production run of at least 3000 engines.
3. Keep the fuel flow restrictions - power through efficiency
4. The MGU systems are standardized but optional.
5. Battery is optional, and it's capacity is not limited by rules.
6. Forced induction is allowed, but unregulated.
7. Unobtanium, vibranium, kryptonite and other exotic metals are banned.
This set of rules would lower the costs since it's low tech. Teams would not risk being caught out without an engine, like Red Bull a couple of years ago. The marketing for manufacturers value would also be greater since they would actually run the same engine in the racecar as in your Renault or Ferrari. The costs would also be curtailed since it's no way these engines would cost 22 million dollars. Not even if you started with quali-engines again. Teams would also find different ways to performance.
2. Goodbye Ferrari.
3. Yes. First sensible thing you've said.
4. They are currently optional. The rules do not say "thou shall have and MGUK and an MGUH". It is just that you would be lost without them. Standardized. uuuugh. I say no MGUH don't bother with ERS at all.
5. See last point in 4.
6. All would use forced induction in order to maximize power as per 3.
7. As is the case now.