I don’t recall the rules were setup to make the cars lighter. Just less interfering to each other.DarthPlagueisTheVise wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 00:59Why exactly are 2022 cars getting heavier? I thought their objective was to make the cars lighter. And I am kind of a technical noob so the answer is probably quite simple.
Thanks for the reply !Jolle wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 01:23I don’t recall the rules were setup to make the cars lighter. Just less interfering to each other.DarthPlagueisTheVise wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 00:59Why exactly are 2022 cars getting heavier? I thought their objective was to make the cars lighter. And I am kind of a technical noob so the answer is probably quite simple.
Weight, especially loosing it is expensive. With every kilogram the cost goes up exponentially.
Mercedes for instance can run a lightweight chassis because they could afford to only use them for 7-8 races, so they can run a more heavy water-air intercooler. With the new cost cap, weight savings are far more difficult.
Did you not see the new wheels and tyres? Do you expect them to weight?DarthPlagueisTheVise wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 00:59Why exactly are 2022 cars getting heavier? I thought their objective was to make the cars lighter. And I am kind of a technical noob so the answer is probably quite simple.
Isn't the issue today that the teams have gone from spending money on new computers and improved wind tunnels, to spending it on ever more complex dynos, simulators etc.? All in order to find ways to make a car that is substantially heavier than the old V10 as quick, or quicker, than they were. The extra weight alone should make them 4 - 5 seconds / lap slower, but they aren't.
It's a self defeating circle. Make the cars heavier slows the cars, to go faster you need more downforce, more downforce you corner faster, you corner faster you need better safety, you improve safety it increases weight, so you need laptime from more downforce, more downforce makes it harder to follow... etc I wouldn't say the racing now is any better than it was in 2004/05, just the inclusion of DRS papers over the gaps. I don't know what the solution is, other than appointing me emperor of F1Just_a_fan wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 10:13Isn't the issue today that the teams have gone from spending money on new computers and improved wind tunnels, to spending it on ever more complex dynos, simulators etc.? All in order to find ways to make a car that is substantially heavier than the old V10 as quick, or quicker, than they were. The extra weight alone should make them 4 - 5 seconds / lap slower, but they aren't.
In effect, they have been required to add 25% extra mass to the cars and have still managed to make them the quickest F1 cars in history. And that is always going to be expensive when faced by restrictive rules (easy in a free-for-all, as Porsche showed).
Just look at the halo. That's added about 20kg to the weight of the cars. That's for the halo itself and also for the additional chassis structure required to take the test loads. Now there are some that say dump the halo, it's heavy and ugly, etc., but it's probably saved lives already so it's not going anywhere unless someone comes up with an equally strong system to replace it.
The monocoque is one of the lighter parts along the spine of the car. Go back to 2008 a monocoque was ~55kg, add 20kg for a halo it's still only 75kg, I think the side intrusion panels added ~5kg, plus there's a new front intrusion panel coming after the Hubert/Correa accident. The batteries/inverter add another 30.6kg, though I guess you could classify this as useful ballast as it's placed low down in a similar region that ballast would be placed in the 2000s. So say 80-85kg now (excluding ballasts). The bigger increase is the PU going from 95kg to 150kg.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 11:51Just look at the halo. That's added about 20kg to the weight of the cars. That's for the halo itself and also for the additional chassis structure required to take the test loads. Now there are some that say dump the halo, it's heavy and ugly, etc., but it's probably saved lives already so it's not going anywhere unless someone comes up with an equally strong system to replace it.
I don't think that's what this discussion has devolved into (yet maybe). The 1.5litre turbos weighed ~150kg all in so they weren't that smallJolle wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 12:18Arrr arrrr bring back the V10’s arrrr that was racing then arrr arrr its all the fault of aarrr arrr
Why not go back to the little 1.5 liter four cilinders with no downforce? Formula Ford on steroids?
As long as I can remember (been watching since the mid eighties), the old folk of the time always complained that cars were getting heavier, bigger, that it wasn’t the racing it used to be (back then its was the call to go back to the cigars from the sixties).
I was referring to the 1.5 natural aspirated engines from when F1 cars were really light, around 450 kg for a lotus 18.jjn9128 wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 12:23I don't think that's what this discussion has devolved into (yet maybe). The 1.5litre turbos weighed ~150kg all in so they weren't that smallJolle wrote: ↑21 Apr 2021, 12:18Arrr arrrr bring back the V10’s arrrr that was racing then arrr arrr its all the fault of aarrr arrr
Why not go back to the little 1.5 liter four cilinders with no downforce? Formula Ford on steroids?
As long as I can remember (been watching since the mid eighties), the old folk of the time always complained that cars were getting heavier, bigger, that it wasn’t the racing it used to be (back then its was the call to go back to the cigars from the sixties).