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C'mon new F1 series with (more) open regulations!
I don't think that 'open' would work well. i hope they'd come up with something 'clever'. What I mean by 'clever' - as an example new rule about minimum radius around sidepods. I think it is smart - simple and effective. They don't just bluntly forbid wings or airfoils - to me that rule is a consequense of guys like Byrne, Symmonds and Whitmarsh tacking part in the development of the rules. Adjustable aero is also nice - I just don't like that '2 times per lap' part.Ogami musashi wrote:Let's hope it will provide with more open regulations.
I'm hoping they come to this arrangement for 2011 regs. Does anyone know how much fuel the cars use on average during a race? If the race is 300km and they roughly use 65l/100km it will be 195litres for a race. Mosley wants that cut by 20% -- 156 litres for a race. There's your limittimbo wrote:I don't think that 'open' would work well. i hope they'd come up with something 'clever'. What I mean by 'clever' - as an example new rule about minimum radius around sidepods. I think it is smart - simple and effective. They don't just bluntly forbid wings or airfoils - to me that rule is a consequense of guys like Byrne, Symmonds and Whitmarsh tacking part in the development of the rules. Adjustable aero is also nice - I just don't like that '2 times per lap' part.Ogami musashi wrote:Let's hope it will provide with more open regulations.
I've read somewhere (maybe on this forum) about another smart idea for engine department - limit fuel for the race, say, to 150L and let teams choose any engine configuration.
So I want something like this - restrictions that are well defined and leave space for creativeness.
Any vertical cross section of bodywork normal to the car centre line situated in the volumes defined below must form one tangent continuous curve on its external surface. This tangent continuous curve may not contain any radius less than 75mm :
- the volume between 50mm forward of the rear wheel centre line and 300mm rearward of the rear face of the cockpit entry template, which is more than 25mm from the car centre line and more than 100mm above the reference plane ;
- the volume between 300mm rearward of the rear face of the cockpit entry template and the rear face of the cockpit entry template, which is more than 125mm from the car centre line and more than 100mm above the reference plane ;
- the volume between the rear face of the cockpit entry template and 450mm forward of the rear face of the cockpit entry template, which is more than 350mm from the car centre line and more than 100mm above the reference plane.
The surfaces lying within these volumes, which are situated more than 55mm forward of the rear wheel centre line, must not contain any apertures (other than those permitted by Article 3.8.5) or contain any vertical surfaces which lie normal to the centre line of the car
timbo wrote:I don't think that 'open' would work well. i hope they'd come up with something 'clever'. What I mean by 'clever' - as an example new rule about minimum radius around sidepods. I think it is smart - simple and effective. They don't just bluntly forbid wings or airfoils - to me that rule is a consequense of guys like Byrne, Symmonds and Whitmarsh tacking part in the development of the rules. Adjustable aero is also nice - I just don't like that '2 times per lap' part.Ogami musashi wrote:Let's hope it will provide with more open regulations.
I've read somewhere (maybe on this forum) about another smart idea for engine department - limit fuel for the race, say, to 150L and let teams choose any engine configuration.
So I want something like this - restrictions that are well defined and leave space for creativeness.
johnbeamer wrote:Ogami - when you say the bargeboards will be integrated to the bodywork from the nose to the (sidepod) inlet do you mean they'll actually form part of the bodywork, i.e. no space between the board and the bodywork?
From 3.8.4 it seems as though these shapes would need to be fairly rounded, which means barge boards would change quite a lot from what we are seeing now
Any vertical cross section of bodywork normal to the car centre line situated in the volumes defined below must form one tangent continuous curve on its external surface. This tangent continuous curve may not contain any radius less than 75mm :
- the volume between 50mm forward of the rear wheel centre line and 300mm rearward of the rear face of the cockpit entry template, which is more than 25mm from the car centre line and more than 100mm above the reference plane ;
- the volume between 300mm rearward of the rear face of the cockpit entry template and the rear face of the cockpit entry template, which is more than 125mm from the car centre line and more than 100mm above the reference plane ;
- the volume between the rear face of the cockpit entry template and 450mm forward of the rear face of the cockpit entry template, which is more than 350mm from the car centre line and more than 100mm above the reference plane.
The surfaces lying within these volumes, which are situated more than 55mm forward of the rear wheel centre line, must not contain any apertures (other than those permitted by Article 3.8.5) or contain any vertical surfaces which lie normal to the centre line of the car
It is possible i think. You can carry turbulence wind tunnel tests.Metar wrote:Thing is, it's hard to define "not too turbulent", "not too much downforce" and "public appeal of sound (or appearance)".
No, not if one of the criteria is "not too costly".Metar wrote: At the same time, opening up the regulations would counter the FIA's budget-cutting attempts.
I think regulations that reuire wind tunnel tests won't work or development of the car would be limited too - imagine that for any little aero tweak you have to run wind tunnel, not good!Ogami musashi wrote:It is possible i think. You can carry turbulence wind tunnel tests.
Not too much downforce is really simple to test as you can measure the loads on a wing.
No, not if one of the criteria is "not too costly".
Actually the tightening of regulations forces teams to spend a lot while it would have been possible to do otherwise.
If the diffusers and wings were allowed to be more efficient from the start, teams would not have spent so much on the flips up.
It would also be a hassle to test every development again, not to mention that teams won't really be happy with someone else watching their wind-tunnel results.Ogami musashi wrote:It is possible i think. You can carry turbulence wind tunnel tests.
You basically create a baseline chassis with baseline aero devices, then put in front of that the car you test.
Then you can do the same but inversed (the car tested behind a baseline chassis) to measure how much it lose.
It would not be dead on precise but fairly reliable.
I'd welcome a sound like the S2000-class rallycars (NA 2-liters producing 280HP). Others would find it terrible, and would want their singing V12s. Others would want thick, burbly V8s. Others will want diesels...Ogami musashi wrote:Appealing to the public would be subjective but i bet a turbine engine (except a very high flow rate one like a fighter jet/drasgter) would not appeal.
Define "not too costly" - Ferrari will argue that 50mil per race is reasonable, Aguri would've argued 20mil per season is enough. If you set a straight limit (100mil$, for example), you'll find top-teams spending money on outsourced contract-work for CFD, KERS or windtunnel work (Ferrari already tasked Dallara with their F2009, BMW Sauber uses the BMW Motorsport arm for KERS) without it appearing in the official balances. If you don't, then teams will argue on the definition of costly - or agree that cars should be built out of scrap-metal and recycled plastic.Ogami musashi wrote:No, not if one of the criteria is "not too costly".Metar wrote: At the same time, opening up the regulations would counter the FIA's budget-cutting attempts.
Actually the tightening of regulations forces teams to spend a lot while it would have been possible to do otherwise.
If the diffusers and wings were allowed to be more efficient from the start, teams would not have spent so much on the flips up.
He wants to free up drive train development - in exchange for manufacturers supplying independent teams free of charge.
"It does need a real reduction in cost," he said. "It needs the independent teams to be able to operate profitably and if they can't operate profitably they won't operate at all eventually because they have to run at a profit.
"At the moment, if you're an independent team like Toro Rosso or Force India, you can't run at a profit – you depend on a billionaire to subsidise you. And there just aren't enough billionaires around to subsidise. So that problem has got to be solved.
"One of the suggestions being made is the first thing you do is move the development area essentially into the drivetrain so that you're looking at the new technologies in the drivetrain, things like KERS, things like turbo generators, heat recovery, all those sort of things which are relevant to the road."
It is already the case. FIA tests are done on several parts (including engines) and thus they have access to performance data.Metar wrote:
It would also be a hassle to test every development again, not to mention that teams won't really be happy with someone else watching their wind-tunnel results.
That would be it, defined by all teams...after all that's the concept of budget cap.Metar wrote:
Define "not too costly"