Zynerji wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 04:20
djos wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 04:12
Zynerji wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 04:06
I'm so depressed about these new engines.
I simply cannot wrap my mind around how much F1 goes out of its way to be mediocre. I can only blame it on the leadership not having a clear vision, and the nuts to carry it through to completion.
Yeah, I'm pretty disappointed too (a very underwhelming concept) - however, I'll wait till I see and hear them on-track before I make my full judgement.
Spec a current engine design (control engine), give to teams. Teams can modify engine, but all changes are published to other teams.
Cheap, powerful, current tech (losing MGUH is backsliding idiocy if staying hybrid).
I'd rather just see the 3L V10's with zero- carbon synthetic fuels.
And holy sh*t, if limiting the number of engines, just allow the teams to rebuild them! How many DNF from seal/bearing failure or ring failure since 2009? How many engines blown up on dyno just to get 3 to make it 24 races?
F1 is like someone with a self-asphyxiation kink, and it needs to stop.
The easiest way to fix the 2026 rules is to modify them to be more suitable.
I would ditch the MGUK and ES from the 2026 regs, instantly saving 55kg.
I'd try to get 5-10kg more from the ICE minimum weight.
Change the fuel flow regs from:
EF = 0.27 * N +165, maximum 3000MJ/h from 10,500rpm to red line.
To
EF = 0.35 * N +125, maximum 4500MJ/h from 12,500rpm to red line.
Allow anti-lag systems.
I would make gearboxes 6 speed instead of 8, and allow final drive ratio changes.
Shorten the chassis.
Narrow the front wing and bodywork.
Try to get minimum weight down to 700kg, including driver.
I would think that this would give an engine of around 800hp.Anti-lag will make some noise and, hopefully, spit some flame.
Lighter cars will be more nimble, which should make them look faster.