I agree with the other posters that this is no silver bullet to create exciting races.
Fortunately Todt is only encouraging a study to evaluate it, rather than a knee-jerk or emotional decision.
That's the rule which meant Schumacher has so few poles relative to Hamilton, as well as his own win tally. Also the rule which gave us the Trulli trains as Toyota went for the glory runs.
Assuming the car trying the overtake is on better tyres or has less fuel on board due to different strategy the pace advantage should be bigger than it is now making the actual braking distance less of an issue.bonjon1979 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2019, 22:52Doesn’t a lighter car shorten braking distances which means its harder to overtake? I prefer the lighter cars, I prefer the way they move and look on track. But will it actually have the desired effect? I remember the refuelling era, there was very little if any overtaking. It’s much better now.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑12 Jul 2019, 22:42That's not a given. Sure, they'll be a bit lighter, but will it be enough to mean that the cars can do the full race flat out on a total fuel weight equivalent to today's limit?
Sure, but how realistic is that regarding Pirellis approach of "minimum development and expenses" policy they showed so far?Big Tea wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 15:18Giving this more thought, It seems far more sensible and more 'bang per buck' to return to unlimited tyres. Just about all the plus points from low fuel can be obtained from a tyre advantage.
A return to 'qualli grade' through to non-stop endurance would open up more options than fuel.
It is the cost of taking the refueling kit around the world more than the cost of having the kit. There is a huge difference in a 'standard' refuel rig and the pressure monsters we saw (and saw fail) in the previous refuel period.Dr. Acula wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 17:04Sure, but how realistic is that regarding Pirellis approach of "minimum development and expenses" policy they showed so far?Big Tea wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 15:18Giving this more thought, It seems far more sensible and more 'bang per buck' to return to unlimited tyres. Just about all the plus points from low fuel can be obtained from a tyre advantage.
A return to 'qualli grade' through to non-stop endurance would open up more options than fuel.
And when it comes to costs of the refueling equipment, i'm really on Todts side. They aren't that expensive. We see refueling in WEC and Indycar and nobody complains about the costs of these things there and they have teams with a lot smaller budgets than even the poorest F1 team.
Race pace is the priority. Pit stop passing was proto-DRS. A way to safely maximize race pace and position. This is why DRS was introduced, why the teams like it, why it will likely say. Despite naysayers and occasional critique from drivers.
So much agree. Wonder why ES has stagnated. We need more powerful non ICE bits on these cars.
Yes sometimes they just don't seem to think clearly about things do they. In the beginning you can understand why they didn't want one team to waltz away with a huge advantage, but they need to update it. They could keep the same concept but with a smaller ICE and as you say more electricity, and while they're at it show us fans the ES state like they used to with KERS, like Ross said he was going to in 2017 but seems to have forgotten. Toto would fix it!digitalrurouni wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 21:27So much agree. Wonder why ES has stagnated. We need more powerful non ICE bits on these cars.