Incorrectrichard_leeds wrote:KERS has been dropped by full agreement. It would take full agreement to bring it back.WhiteBlue wrote:It requires unanimity to drop KERS and that may just not be on the cards.
Incorrectrichard_leeds wrote:KERS has been dropped by full agreement. It would take full agreement to bring it back.WhiteBlue wrote:It requires unanimity to drop KERS and that may just not be on the cards.
Islam is right. KERS is in the 2010 regulations. The FOTA seven (minus BMW obviously now) will need a unanimous agreement of the other five teams to drop it for 2010.ISLAMATRON wrote:Incorrectrichard_leeds wrote:KERS has been dropped by full agreement. It would take full agreement to bring it back.WhiteBlue wrote:It requires unanimity to drop KERS and that may just not be on the cards.
5.2 Other means of propulsion :
5.2.1 The use of any device, other than the 2.4 litre, four stroke engine described in 5.1 above and one KERS, to power the car, is not permitted.
5.2.2 With the exception of one fully charged KERS, the total amount of recoverable energy stored on the car must not exceed 300kJ. Any which may be recovered at a rate greater than 2kW must not exceed 20kJ.
5.2.3 The maximum power, in or out, of any KERS must not exceed 60kW.
Energy released from the KERS may not exceed 400kJ in any one lap.
Measurements will be taken at the connection to the drivetrain.
5.2.4 The amount of stored energy in any KERS may not be increased whilst the car is stationary during a race pit stop.
Release of power from any such system must remain under the complete control of the driver at all times the car is on the track.
The KERS may not be operated whilst the car is travelling above 300km/h.
5.2.5 All KERS energy storage devices must be situated between the front face of the engine and the driver's back when viewed in lateral projection. When establishing the front face of the engine, no parts of the fuel, oil, water or electrical systems will be considered.
5.2.6 Cars must be fitted with homologated sensors which provide all necessary signals to the SDR in order to verify the requirements above are being respected.
ISLAMATRON wrote:Incorrectrichard_leeds wrote:KERS has been dropped by full agreement. It would take full agreement to bring it back.WhiteBlue wrote:It requires unanimity to drop KERS and that may just not be on the cards.
I was referring to the collective approach of FOTA teams. Yes, the rules allow for KERS, but the FOTA teams agreed to not take up that option. So it would take a unanimous decision by FOTA for the FOTA teams to use KERS.WhiteBlue wrote: Islam is right. KERS is in the 2010 regulations. The FOTA seven (minus BMW obviously now) will need a unanimous agreement of the other five teams to drop it for 2010.
I stand corrected,I thought FOTA worked on concensus?ISLAMATRON wrote:FOTA is majority rule, not by unanimous decision... so they say, in actuality it is whatever Ferrari says and Toyota agrees with.
That sounds interesting. It may be pure fantasy now, but small steps now can lead to big things in the future. "Induction braking" has a ring to it.xpensive wrote: An unlimited KERS, eliminating conventional brakes on all wheels would be technically xiting, but the complexity a nightmare, completely out of reach for the smaller teams.
Good link, thanks.ISLAMATRON wrote:did you even read?
http://en.f1-live.com/f1/en/headlines/n ... 4439.shtml
Williams seems to care not about FOTA shmota as BE puts it.