Giblet wrote:xxChrisxx wrote:Giblet wrote:Stuff
Oh I understand you alright, I just think you are wrong.
So you do think gearboxes effect the dynamic loading and unloading of tires, and you don't agree that apples and oranges are different.
Your last statement tells me your tank is empty, and you are coasting to a stop.
I have plenty of argument left in me, I dont really see the point of it. Neither of us is ever going to convince the other. I don't view active ride as a driver aid, you do.
You also keep changing your mind and point of argument, or the goal posts when a clear counter to your paper thin arguments arises.
First your argument was cost. But F1 temas will spend the moneythey have got on something. Surely its better to give nan area with real development opportunities.
Then you were against it active ride because of a rather knee jerk reason to safety. When it was pointed out that standard suspensions can fail and cause pretty big accidents you changed tac.
Then it was becuase it was banned under the all sweeping 'driver aids' business. You pointed out that it made the cars easier to drive. Which is exactly what an electronically controlled gear change does.
Then you switched again, to the fact that you only consider systems that affect handling to be worthy of banning.
There is no argument that active ride affects handling, however you essentially make it sound like the active system drives the car. The active ride simply makes the aero more stable, which in an era of cars not being able to get remotely close to one another becuase of aero instability i'd say a call for active ride is a good one.
Lets summarise:
Active ride is expensive. Yes, but not overly so for F1 standards.
Active ride is unsafe. Well no more unsafe than standars suspension systems.
Active ride is a drier aid. Depends on the definition of driver aid.
Active ride makes cars more stable. In an era of cars not being able to follow and overtake due to stability poroblems, i'd say active ride would be a good thing.
"So you do think gearboxes effect the dynamic loading and unloading of tires, and you don't agree that apples and oranges are different."
No I dont because that would be stupid. It's not a case of apples and oranges its a case of I consider both Breburn and Cox to be apples. I am focusing on the fact that both AS and electronic gearchange systems offer a level of control of a system over a purely mechanical system controlled by the driver.
You are building a stawman by trying to force it to be an apples and oranes case by focusing on an area of control that clearly suspension controls and the transmission doesnt. Then claiming victory.
You seem to be obsessed by what is controlled, rather than the issue of control itsself.
Electronic flappy paddles,
elimintes driver error from gear changes. In the highly unlikely even of shifting up 2 gears they just flick the switch the other way *POP* back in the correct gear, no penalty.
Active ride
doesnt eleiminte driver error from handling. It merely improves stability on bumpy surfaces at low speed and makes aero more efficient at higher speeds.
Bottom line is: they banned to wrong system.
Show would be better with manual geaboxes, making the possilbity of missing a gear more likely (overtaking increases). Active rise improves aero stability (overtaking increases).