mclaren111 wrote: ↑07 Jul 2021, 15:40
Motorsport is All about the Senses... Sight, Sound, Smell & Atmosphere...
Lets get back to these Fundamentals...
I like all those things! Heck my everyday runabout is an old-fashioned high-revving high-pollution econobox hatchback (without the econo part!) -- the Honda K20A stopped meeting emissions back in 2010.
Here in Australia there
is no CO2 road tax, so we merrily (or ignorantly, foolishly, untenably and anti-socially?) drive around in massively polluting gas guzzlers like sporty hatchbacks,
turbocharged 4.0L Ford Falcons and 6.2L V8 Holden Commodores.
But I'm not sure a return to lax policies on motor vehicles emissions is realistic, particularly for the European Union where Formula One racing is based. It would be in direct contradiction to the Euro 7 emissions regulation roadmap and reduction in fleet average CO2 roadmap that has been outlined by the EU.
The EU rules and CO2 taxation, plus the high fuel excise, especially in places like France and Denmark, do a
really good job of restricting such ultra-polluting gas guzzlers to only the super-rich... I can't imagine an average Dane would dream of driving a 4.0L or 6.2L ICE personal vehicle, yet here in Australia such guzzlers are quite common.
Anybody can buy an old 3.5L Toyota Aurion (or Kluger), old 4.0L Ford Falcon (
or Ford Territory) or 3.6L Holden Commodore in Australia -- those are just the basic family car models! The tax penalty on such a vehicle here in Australia is essentially
none (I guess that is why the Ford Falcon always had much larger engines than the Ford Granada or Scorpio?).
Sadly, a return to 3.5L or 3.0L ICEs in Formula One racing seems but a pipe dream.