Well that's what Trump wants, anyway. If people keep dying at the current rate then we'll be having this discussion until the mid-summer at least.godlameroso wrote: ↑26 Mar 2020, 16:57Frankly I don't see this situation lasting for more than another 3 weeks. I expect things to go back to normal late April, so maybe the season starts in early May.
Well the problem is even if the situation gets better, the measures against the virus need to stay in place for some time. South Korea lifted quarantines and stuff initially when they saw the first drop in the number of infected people. Guess what happend, the number immediatly got up again.godlameroso wrote: ↑26 Mar 2020, 16:57Frankly I don't see this situation lasting for more than another 3 weeks. I expect things to go back to normal late April, so maybe the season starts in early May.
godlameroso wrote: ↑26 Mar 2020, 16:57Frankly I don't see this situation lasting for more than another 3 weeks. I expect things to go back to normal late April, so maybe the season starts in early May.
By "chassis" they only mean the surviving cell/the monocoque/the tub, not "the car minus the engine".Pyrone89 wrote: ↑26 Mar 2020, 16:15So far I have read, without them providing details, about:
1. 2021 next gen regulations become 2022 (but unclear if the DAS ban still starts in 2021 or if that is also postponed, which would be counterintuitive as they take these measures to save costs, and a DAS spending battle is the opposite)
2. Ban on development of 2022 cars until february 2021 (how are they going to police that?)
3. Financial regulations still go ahead in 2021 as planned
4. Chassis development is frozen, but unclear is what is exactly defined as the chassis. This is likely a very big area of concern for teams that are behind as they cant catch up through chassis changes such as a narrower nose.
5. Development freeze on other parts is beimg discussed. Same applies as to 4: that would lock in advantages and makes it almost impossible to catch up. So might as well hand out the next 2 championship thropies if you do that.
You're very optimistic.godlameroso wrote: ↑26 Mar 2020, 16:57Frankly I don't see this situation lasting for more than another 3 weeks. I expect things to go back to normal late April, so maybe the season starts in early May.
What’s going to change to make that possible? Most countries of the world are in exponential case growth at this point. Only 2 things will stop the virus, herd immunity and/or a vaccine. It will slow down as its targets reduce and medical services will get better at handling its consequences. But 3 weeks?godlameroso wrote: ↑26 Mar 2020, 16:57Frankly I don't see this situation lasting for more than another 3 weeks. I expect things to go back to normal late April, so maybe the season starts in early May.
Would this prevent others from getting DAS and variable Ackermann, as these are housed in and on the monocoqueBlackout wrote: ↑26 Mar 2020, 18:44We already have topics for this;
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=28819
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=28909
By "chassis" they only mean the surviving cell/the monocoque/the tub, not "the car minus the engine".Pyrone89 wrote: ↑26 Mar 2020, 16:15So far I have read, without them providing details, about:
1. 2021 next gen regulations become 2022 (but unclear if the DAS ban still starts in 2021 or if that is also postponed, which would be counterintuitive as they take these measures to save costs, and a DAS spending battle is the opposite)
2. Ban on development of 2022 cars until february 2021 (how are they going to police that?)
3. Financial regulations still go ahead in 2021 as planned
4. Chassis development is frozen, but unclear is what is exactly defined as the chassis. This is likely a very big area of concern for teams that are behind as they cant catch up through chassis changes such as a narrower nose.
5. Development freeze on other parts is beimg discussed. Same applies as to 4: that would lock in advantages and makes it almost impossible to catch up. So might as well hand out the next 2 championship thropies if you do that.
And the chassis is probably the most expensive part of the car after the engine so a freeze will make them save a lot of money and time.
They plan to freeze the gearbox too which is the third most costly part IMO. => a big amount of ressources and time saved
And same chassis = same fuel tank = a good amount of money and time saved.
You're very optimistic.godlameroso wrote: ↑26 Mar 2020, 16:57Frankly I don't see this situation lasting for more than another 3 weeks. I expect things to go back to normal late April, so maybe the season starts in early May.
IMO there will be no f1 season if we dont find a cure against this virus before may.
Probably. Same chassis, same rules, same mechanical parts => same steering IMO