mzso wrote: ↑30 Jan 2019, 15:00
To what? Where could a morbidly complex system of flaps, winglets, whatnot could be utilized in a meaningful manner?
Anything that touches fluid dynamics. Aviation both public and military, weather prediction models, wind turbine development, etc etc.
"But mooommmm, that's not the same as all those flaps, winglets!"
I talked about cross over. Specifically, getting a deeper understanding and getting better tools to predict turbulent airflow is generally applicable on anything that requires contact with airflow.
F1 was never about making the fastest cars possible, otherwise there wouldn't be rules.
Standardizing something like wings/body won't make the cars uniform. It will just open up other more meaningful and relevant fields for development. And would also prevent racing being destroyed by nasty aero as it had for the past 15 years or so.
If there were no rules, cars would atleast be 20s a lap faster yes. However, there are other considerations: road car relevancy (hence the current generation of power units), safety (probably the biggest factor in the regulations), costs, ability to follow closer,... . However, nobody here will deny F1 has the reputation of being the fastest series in regards of getting around a track in a car. Just because there's easily room for more speed, does not mean that reputation does not matter. Why you else think the 2017 regulations got introduced? They wanted the cars up to 5s quicker.
I don't want to look down you; you probably mean well, but trying to claim F1 is not about having the fastest race cars around is silly. Just because there are a pletora of other concerns around limiting the speed, does not mean that goal of speed is crossed out. It's a very tough balancing excercise.