What do you base this on? Also, if they did, why did they complain?
That is their logic, it would be too "difficult and costly" to make the cars that short.JordanMugen wrote: ↑25 Oct 2020, 19:04I suspect because the teams are selfish and do not wish to redesign their gearbox housings and radiators layouts.
They design new gearboxes every year anyway. And the 2022 designs are completely new, and nothing is carry over, so that sounds like a bad excuse to me. I'm really disappointed FIA caved in, to me an F1 car should be aesthetically pleasing too, and the current cars look stupid being this long ...Sevach wrote: ↑25 Oct 2020, 20:02That is their logic, it would be too "difficult and costly" to make the cars that short.JordanMugen wrote: ↑25 Oct 2020, 19:04I suspect because the teams are selfish and do not wish to redesign their gearbox housings and radiators layouts.
FIA who intended to force smaller wheelbases gave in.
True, but something's got to give, eventually. I mean, you could say "keep it F1!!!" but if all the customer teams drop out and it's a grid of 6-8 cars... who cares if it's "F1".Just_a_fan wrote: ↑30 Aug 2020, 15:42It's not F1. F1 isn't a spec series. Quite simple really.JordanMugen wrote: ↑30 Aug 2020, 14:01That controls cost, what's wrong with that?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑28 Mar 2019, 13:39Looks like F1 is going to be merging with Indy sometime around 2025. Basically a spec series with little for the teams to do other than turn up and polish the paintwork.
You don't need to turn it into a spec series to attract teams. You just need to make it affordable.cheeRS wrote: ↑26 Oct 2020, 07:06True, but something's got to give, eventually. I mean, you could say "keep it F1!!!" but if all the customer teams drop out and it's a grid of 6-8 cars... who cares if it's "F1".
Unless you're a big Merc fan (like I am), you want change and closer racing . Everyone (that's not a merc fan) complains that Merc has dominated for close to a decade. I could easily say "well, that's what F1 is, not a spec series", but...
The diameter of the tire increases slightly right?? But the front tires are becoming narrowerjjn9128 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2020, 12:21Also the power unit and chassis rules need to be thought holistically. No point in the next power unit rules making less power if the 2022 cars make more drag (with bigger tyres they are draggier!), the cars will be slower. As aerodynamic drag is the main reason cars can't race going towards a draggy concept doesn't help anyway (they use the aero at the rear of the car to move the wake away from where it's harmful but it's still less efficient).
For me lightweight, less powerful but more efficient cars is the way to go. The fuel limit should be coming down too. Move the KERS to the front axle and limit the length to 5m. I'd keep the budget cap where it is but include driver and team boss salaries.
the MGU-K makes use of the 8 gears - to keep the voltage high and so minimise/stabilise the current requirement
I don't know what it would do for looks, but a potentially more agile and nervous car would be great for us.Holm86 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2020, 02:39They design new gearboxes every year anyway. And the 2022 designs are completely new, and nothing is carry over, so that sounds like a bad excuse to me. I'm really disappointed FIA caved in, to me an F1 car should be aesthetically pleasing too, and the current cars look stupid being this long ...Sevach wrote: ↑25 Oct 2020, 20:02That is their logic, it would be too "difficult and costly" to make the cars that short.JordanMugen wrote: ↑25 Oct 2020, 19:04
I suspect because the teams are selfish and do not wish to redesign their gearbox housings and radiators layouts.
FIA who intended to force smaller wheelbases gave in.
The more agile and nervous cars was also my main reason back when I started advocating for shorter carsSevach wrote: ↑26 Oct 2020, 15:11I don't know what it would do for looks, but a potentially more agile and nervous car would be great for us.Holm86 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2020, 02:39They design new gearboxes every year anyway. And the 2022 designs are completely new, and nothing is carry over, so that sounds like a bad excuse to me. I'm really disappointed FIA caved in, to me an F1 car should be aesthetically pleasing too, and the current cars look stupid being this long ...
And yeah bad excuse, i agree.
Increasing from 670mm to 725mm is quite a big increase. The width change is 305mm to 275mm iirc
It would be a single line in the regs: Max lenght 4.3 meters. And just be done with it.Sevach wrote: ↑26 Oct 2020, 15:11I don't know what it would do for looks, but a potentially more agile and nervous car would be great for us.Holm86 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2020, 02:39They design new gearboxes every year anyway. And the 2022 designs are completely new, and nothing is carry over, so that sounds like a bad excuse to me. I'm really disappointed FIA caved in, to me an F1 car should be aesthetically pleasing too, and the current cars look stupid being this long ...
And yeah bad excuse, i agree.
Well, more tire thread surface means it should be easier to make more durable tires. Maybe for once Pirelli succeeds.