Thread for discussion of front page article on bodywork regulations:
How the bodywork rules shape Formula 1 cars
This is something I'm thinking about - is it possible to reduce restriction without the performance running away and becoming dangerous, if so how. Is there a way to open up rules without then setting off an arms race, e.g can you set limits but then allow freedom about how to meet those, and does that fly in the face of open competition? I think this is where my next article is going.
I've posted about this over the years, often to ridicule, but a MINIMUM spending limit per team with full data sharing would solve this 100%. Blockchain the design/sim software, and anything is legal as long as the data is opened up to the other teams at the event where a new part is introduced.jjn9128 wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 14:20This is something I'm thinking about - is it possible to reduce restriction without the performance running away and becoming dangerous, if so how. Is there a way to open up rules without then setting off an arms race, e.g can you set limits but then allow freedom about how to meet those, and does that fly in the face of open competition? I think this is where my next article is going.
I think F1 has a lot of issues with regard to the rules. The lack of an holistic concept for engine and bodywork rules is chief among them - I've said it before, the deltawing concept is one I like, "half weight, half drag, half power, half fuel" it might not have been all that pretty but there was at least an overarching aim.
The cars will all look similar, and the parts that you can alter and shape aren't visible. I sincerely hope the racing is better with the new heavier cars. If it isn't as good as this season, the new cars will be a downgrade. Maybe it needs to happen for the plans that management has for F1. Teams feel there is a lot of cheap development on the table this year, so it becomes tempting to invest in this year at the expense of next. Particularly when the cars will be so similar. For the midfield, they're so close that a tenth can mean the difference between 6th and 3rd in the constructors.jjn9128 wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 14:20This is something I'm thinking about - is it possible to reduce restriction without the performance running away and becoming dangerous, if so how. Is there a way to open up rules without then setting off an arms race, e.g can you set limits but then allow freedom about how to meet those, and does that fly in the face of open competition? I think this is where my next article is going.
I think F1 has a lot of issues with regard to the rules. The lack of an holistic concept for engine and bodywork rules is chief among them - I've said it before, the deltawing concept is one I like, "half weight, half drag, half power, half fuel" it might not have been all that pretty but there was at least an overarching aim.
After Q2 in Azerbaijan, I can only expect that the current closeness of the teams will spread back out.godlameroso wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 16:02The cars will all look similar, and the parts that you can alter and shape aren't visible. I sincerely hope the racing is better with the new heavier cars. If it isn't as good as this season, the new cars will be a downgrade. Maybe it needs to happen for the plans that management has for F1. Teams feel there is a lot of cheap development on the table this year, so it becomes tempting to invest in this year at the expense of next. Particularly when the cars will be so similar. For the midfield, they're so close that a tenth can mean the difference between 6th and 3rd in the constructors.jjn9128 wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 14:20This is something I'm thinking about - is it possible to reduce restriction without the performance running away and becoming dangerous, if so how. Is there a way to open up rules without then setting off an arms race, e.g can you set limits but then allow freedom about how to meet those, and does that fly in the face of open competition? I think this is where my next article is going.
I think F1 has a lot of issues with regard to the rules. The lack of an holistic concept for engine and bodywork rules is chief among them - I've said it before, the deltawing concept is one I like, "half weight, half drag, half power, half fuel" it might not have been all that pretty but there was at least an overarching aim.
I am another Deltawing fan, truly out-of-the-box thinking.jjn9128 wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 14:20This is something I'm thinking about - is it possible to reduce restriction without the performance running away and becoming dangerous, if so how. Is there a way to open up rules without then setting off an arms race, e.g can you set limits but then allow freedom about how to meet those, and does that fly in the face of open competition? I think this is where my next article is going.
I think F1 has a lot of issues with regard to the rules. The lack of an holistic concept for engine and bodywork rules is chief among them - I've said it before, the deltawing concept is one I like, "half weight, half drag, half power, half fuel" it might not have been all that pretty but there was at least an overarching aim.
Good thing I didnt own one of the 2 teams that signed up for the 2010 "$40M, build what you want" regualtions.Stu wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 16:34I am another Deltawing fan, truly out-of-the-box thinking.jjn9128 wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 14:20This is something I'm thinking about - is it possible to reduce restriction without the performance running away and becoming dangerous, if so how. Is there a way to open up rules without then setting off an arms race, e.g can you set limits but then allow freedom about how to meet those, and does that fly in the face of open competition? I think this is where my next article is going.
I think F1 has a lot of issues with regard to the rules. The lack of an holistic concept for engine and bodywork rules is chief among them - I've said it before, the deltawing concept is one I like, "half weight, half drag, half power, half fuel" it might not have been all that pretty but there was at least an overarching aim.
I also think that Zynerji’s idea of ‘open’ development has legs, I have been around various series and the best (and closest and most affordable) have had inferred budget caps on various items. Inferred, as the rules stated that a competitor could ask to buy item ‘X’ for £YYY, there was little point in spending more.
F1 was going to head in that direction in 2009(?) but it got bashed by the big spenders…
That's precisely why data sharing would fix the issue. Go ahead and spend $1B on your car... Everyone else will just copy the design, and we wouldn't end up with "Dynasties" that end up being just boring af...Jolle wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 17:38Although the idea is nice to have a budget limit as the main technical regulation and would see some nice differences in design, it would kill on track competition.
Because of the big differences, it’s likely that one team will be miles ahead of the competition, that, because they can’t invest as much, will take forever to catch up.
Fun idea for club racing, for formula one I don’t see any of the sponsors/investors/teams willing to invest anything just to be given free to their rivals.Zynerji wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 17:40That's precisely why data sharing would fix the issue. Go ahead and spend $1B on your car... Everyone else will just copy the design, and we wouldn't end up with "Dynasties" that end up being just boring af...Jolle wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 17:38Although the idea is nice to have a budget limit as the main technical regulation and would see some nice differences in design, it would kill on track competition.
Because of the big differences, it’s likely that one team will be miles ahead of the competition, that, because they can’t invest as much, will take forever to catch up.
What about all of the FREE stuff they get from the other teams? I give one, get nine in return. That sounds like a GREAT DEAL for everyone involved...Jolle wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 17:56Fun idea for club racing, for formula one I don’t see any of the sponsors/investors/teams willing to invest anything just to be given free to their rivals.Zynerji wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 17:40That's precisely why data sharing would fix the issue. Go ahead and spend $1B on your car... Everyone else will just copy the design, and we wouldn't end up with "Dynasties" that end up being just boring af...Jolle wrote: ↑15 Jun 2021, 17:38Although the idea is nice to have a budget limit as the main technical regulation and would see some nice differences in design, it would kill on track competition.
Because of the big differences, it’s likely that one team will be miles ahead of the competition, that, because they can’t invest as much, will take forever to catch up.