1. Abolish all free practices.
2. 1 lap quali.
3. Cost restrictions.
4. Simpler and not strict technical rules.
Football teams dont do training throughout the week for the match then? They just go home after the match and turn up again a week later at the next?
Really don't hope this will come to F1, it's too gimicky.
Why? Fair question, I have no aero studies, but have also wondered about a DF limit and let the teams explore different ways to reach that. From my ignorant point of view it could be easily achived with some simple sensors in the suspensions and some simple check before each season from FIA. For example: all cars must do a constant speed run at for example 200kmh (so they can do it at any track) on their warm up lap for FIA to check DF on all carsTommy Cookers wrote: ↑19 Jun 2019, 14:56because it would be unworkable in such a highly downforce-sensitive class as F1 ?
Sorry for not following the thread but, did they keep this? I bet they didn´t, but one can dreamSawtooth-spike wrote: ↑06 Apr 2018, 12:08Formula 1's proposals at a glance
Revenues
• The new revenue distribution criteria must be more balanced, based on meritocracy of the current performance and reward success for the teams and the Commercial Rights Holder.
2 things... 1) currently the 2021 wheels will have covers so it wont be that sort of laser spinner thing from the image and 2) Indycar/WEC/GTs have had identifiers for years to help crowds at the track.
The way the downforce cap will work for WEC is the chassis homologation rules - they can only aero 1 update in the 5 years the car is homologated. F1 brings new aero to every race, it'd be impossible to police unless they limit aero updates through the season.Andres125sx wrote: ↑04 Sep 2019, 20:00Why? Fair question, I have no aero studies, but have also wondered about a DF limit and let the teams explore different ways to reach that. From my ignorant point of view it could be easily achived with some simple sensors in the suspensions and some simple check before each season from FIA. For example: all cars must do a constant speed run at for example 200kmh (so they can do it at any track) on their warm up lap for FIA to check DF on all carsTommy Cookers wrote: ↑19 Jun 2019, 14:56because it would be unworkable in such a highly downforce-sensitive class as F1 ?
It would allow very different cars with very different solutions trying to reduce drag. Probably a cost cap would be required tough
Ok but I was proposing a completely different approach to WEC, if you read my post F1 teams could still bring as many updates as they want, while they keep within DF limit at the constant speed checkjjn9128 wrote: ↑04 Sep 2019, 20:09The way the downforce cap will work for WEC is the chassis homologation rules - they can only aero 1 update in the 5 years the car is homologated. F1 brings new aero to every race, it'd be impossible to police unless they limit aero updates through the season.Andres125sx wrote: ↑04 Sep 2019, 20:00Why? Fair question, I have no aero studies, but have also wondered about a DF limit and let the teams explore different ways to reach that. From my ignorant point of view it could be easily achived with some simple sensors in the suspensions and some simple check before each season from FIA. For example: all cars must do a constant speed run at for example 200kmh (so they can do it at any track) on their warm up lap for FIA to check DF on all carsTommy Cookers wrote: ↑19 Jun 2019, 14:56
because it would be unworkable in such a highly downforce-sensitive class as F1 ?
It would allow very different cars with very different solutions trying to reduce drag. Probably a cost cap would be required tough