Those ground effect rules were kind of dropped mainly because of Red Bull who thought they would be carrying their Aero Dominance into the new era.kooleracer wrote:F1 should only make the necessary changes to the PU to make them louder, on the chassis side i totally agree with your article. I also think ground effect is the cheapest way to add downforce without creating a lot of drag. Also with ground effect it would guarantee that even the slowest cars would be a lot quicker then GP2 cars or other race series. Also i think the turbulent air is less with ground effect then with all the little vortex generators teams use nowadays.f1316 wrote:There was that concept floated by Patrick Head and Rory Byrne a few years ago, saying they should go back to ground effect(ish) cars:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/legacy/andre ... _quie.html
This was mooted and then dropped for 2013 but wonder why this isn't being thrown into the mix with current discussions? Seems to me that, with more powerful engines too, this would achieve the goals the fia are after - and would likely leave a less turbulent wake/aid overtaking.
At the moment F1 needs softer tyres and sprint race stints with refueling. The teams were doing 1.22 s during the testing season in frigid conditions and today the best was 1.25.5 that is just bad. And tomorrow's race they will be running 1.32 laps when with refueling they could be doing 1.24's the whole race.
I think that too much is being spent for looking unspectacular, things got to change other than just the sound.
Today's comments by Carlos Sainz and Rafael Marcello were very damaging. This could also be a factor into new manufacturers coming in.