Metar wrote:Very good news that this rule didn't make it. Still doesn't make the 2009-car renders any sweeter. That thing looks like someone viewed a 10-year old F1 car through a fisheye lens.
That is some renders! they do not intend to show the real actual models but explicitly give you an hint on the visual changes.
The wings and over shape won't be strictly like that, it just there to show that the wings dimensions are changed and appendices are banned.
Actually if you watch the little CFD model picture you can see there're differences with the sketches.
Metar wrote:
F1 reached a stage where it's no longer just the dimensions that matter, not just the engine aspiration-method ('80s), configuration ('90s) or state of tune ('00s), or the safety of the car is regulated - we've reached a stage where every single bit cannot exist unless it is explicitly allowed. And the problem is, none are allowed. No chimneys, no flipups, no winglets, no bargeboards, no bridgewings, no noseholes, no V12s, no V10, no Turbochargers.
That's no true. Rules specify maximum areas for some bits. They do not explicitly fobidden anything.
Nowhere in the technical rules you can see something like (as far as bodywork in concerned) "... are not allowed" (okay except moveable aerodynamics.).
That was excatly the same before, simply the rules become more and more restrictive yes.
Metar wrote:
We now have wing-dimensions even more regulated than ever before, we have a ban on anything that isn't the actual smooth body, and we even have regulations stating the shape of that body
, stating exactly how wide a sidepod has to be!
No, nothing states how wide the sidepod has to be, it states a minimum radius for the sidepods that's all.
The max/min dimensions are there since years. That's how work rules for an open constructor championship, you have to set maximum figures to ensure some goals.
Metar wrote:
Ogami, even with aerodynamic development allowed, teams are still incredibly restricted - the shape and number of planes on the wings is set in stone anyway...
That's true this is even more restrictive and i don't think that's a good long term solution, but in fact this is not a long term solution.
Secondly, the shape of planes is absolutely not set in stone, while the number of elements is limited since long time.
That doesn't mean that you can't be as effective.
Metar wrote:
Overtaking, who will care? I've watched Formula Masters at Monza - they were boring. Dull. Mind-numbingly dull. They sounded slow, they looked slow, and I fear they might be what the FIA wants. Sure, they had six overtakes for the lead in a single lap - but at what price?! These single-seaters are severely underpowered spec-cars - as a result, the drag forced the leaders to become very slow. So on every straight, five cars passed you - and how fun is that? It isn't. Drag-induced overtaking is dull - just having a car stay behind you for a series of corners, then emerge from your wake on the first straight and you're left defenseless. Overtaking in F1 may be rare at the moment, but when it happens, it's spectacular. It's two drivers battling to be first into the corner, to be the one on the right line, and the first one out. We need more of that, not some rubbish slipstreaming. In NASCAR terms, we'd need short-tracks and not superspeedways - overtaking, out-braking, taking a wiser line: passing, not drafting past.
I think you misunderstood the 2009 regs, those regs actually DECREASE the drag.
They tend to let some slipstream but any slipstream means loss of downforce so that's definitely not the aim of the OWG.
At least for 2009.
The new sidepods will have a minimum radius to prevent them creating too much turbulence and wings and diffuser will work the same way.
All is done to help overtaking occuring in corners.