DaveKillens wrote:Maybe the term "fuel mileage race" sort of shorted out a few wires in my brain. Many years ago CART experimented with these kinds of races, where basically each car was rationed a specific amount of fuel. Trouble is, the fuel volume was calculated so that a car could not go 100% during the entire race and finish. It was a dismal sight to watch formula cars just circulating around a track doing nothing but laying down consistent laps dictated by fuel burn.
I don't think the tacticians in Formula One will make this mistake, and fuel the cars with enough gas to RACE the entire distance.
I do wish the teams had the option of running a race with just one fuel stop. But considering that they have to run two different tire compounds, and that usually one compound does poor at lasting any respectable distance, that rules it out. Instead, expect nothing but two stop races. Unless someone was willing to gamble on running almost the entire race on one set of tires. Actually, that may suit Trulli.
The front tires will be made narrower. Bridgestone has old tooling for narrower fronts, but no tooling for wider rears. Amazing that where this sport is touted as the peak of racing technology, the tire dimensions are going to be dictated by what some tire manufacturer has left over in their warehouse. Custom designed and built engines, gearboxes, chassis, but not tires.
I remember those CART races very well, it really wasnt that the teams were not given enough fuel to complete the race... the fuel milage came into the race equation because the teams were given a fuel tank size that required refilling(approx) 1.5 times to complete the race and those teams did not want to make that extra stop for the half fill. There were many occasions when Some teams would employ a rabbit strategy and make that extra half fill and would come up behind the leaders at full speed with max power.
It wasnt that they werent give enough fuel to complete the race, they chose to not put that extra fuel into the car to forgo an extra pit stop. There were some races where the driver stopped just short of the finish line out of gas with a large amount of their allotted fuel still sitting in the pit tanks.
Those were the golden era of CART with Zanardi, Andretti, Vassar, Tracy, Franchittii, and a little later Montoya battling out... In my estimation the CART series put together a great formula for outstanding racing. The drivers could win using either fuel strategy, and some lost out using the fuel consevation like the famous 1997 detoit race.
Enjoy...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzOZIKwkF3g