Some folks advocate for Formula One to be wingless (and diffuser-less) like Formula Ford. These folks call surfacing for downforce "aerocrap" and are strongly opposed to racing cars utilising the "free" grip (albeit with a large drag penalty and small weight penalty) offered by downforce.
The Formula Ford follows a "no downforce" philosophy and the regulations say clearly:
http://brsccff1600.co.uk/files/2018__FF ... 20Copy.pdf4.1 Any device designed to augment
aerodynamically the downthrust on the vehicle
is prohibited, as are aerofoils, nose fins or
spoilers of any type.
The first part precludes downforce generation, while the second precludes any wings or airfoils that may be claimed by crafty competitors as being aero neutral or producing lift.
Do you think that such Formula Ford aero regulations would ever be possible in F1?
I'm guessing cornering accelerations would drop to around 2g (???) and lap times would increase by at least 30 seconds per lap.
I take it, there is no appetite among F1 teams for such a "no downforce" approach...?
Formula Fords only have about 160hp and have small 170mm wide rear tyres. I would be very curious how a similarly aerodynamically regulated F1 car with a 1000hp power unit and 400mm wide tyres would perform!
While the slipstream in Formula Ford and Vee is already powerful (with it sometimes being advantageous to give up the lead and then retake it on the last lap), would the slipstream be even more powerful again in F1?