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-   -   F1 Engine Rules - RIDICULOUS!! (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/373956-f1-engine-rules-ridiculous.html)

Aerkuld 10-25-2007 04:53 AM

F1 Engine Rules - RIDICULOUS!!
 
Has anyone else seen this...

http://www.speedtv.com/articles/auto/formulaone/41206/

QUOTE:
"The FIA’s World Motor Sport Council has announced a decision to freeze engine development in Formula 1 for another 10 years, beginning next season. Development had already been forbidden since late last year.

"There will be a total freeze on engine development for a period of 10 years, starting from 2008," the WMSC’s statement read. "A change can be made after five years but only with the unanimous agreement of all stakeholders and following a further two-year notice period. Total freeze means that there will be no exceptions for development of certain parts of the engine, as is the case under the current regulations."

The decision came as a surprise as the introduction of a new technical package more environmentally friendly was expected for 2010, after the manufacturers involved in F1 submitted a proposal last week.
"


That's insane. I see no reason to do this at all. What are all the engine manufacturers going to do? Sit on their arses for 10 years until the next development is allowed?
The whole governing body of F1 is totally whacked. The sooner F1 gets people in charge who know what they're talking about the better. But that's just my opinion!

Jeff Higgins 10-25-2007 04:58 AM

No more than open-wheeled NASCAR at this point. FIA mandated engine management systems, transaxles, brakes; spec tires... now a freeze on engine development. If we want a "spec" open wheel series, we already have CART and IRL. I can see the day coming where F1 collapses under the weight of its own rules.

onewhippedpuppy 10-25-2007 04:59 AM

??? Euro Nascar? The biggest reason I like F1 is their high level of technical development. F1 cars are the fastest and most developed race cars on earth, shame to see that go away.

sammyg2 10-25-2007 06:31 AM

I heard that F1 was going to require all engines to be 360 cu. in. V8s with pushrods and a holly 4 bbl carb. Oh wait, that's nascar.
It's getting harder to tell them apart every year.

frogger 10-25-2007 06:33 AM

http://www.grandprix.com/jpeg/misc/maxwanted1-rg.jpg

Jims5543 10-25-2007 06:33 AM

That is very sad news, I can only advise we all e-mail the FIA and let them know we are not happy as fans.

I just searched their site and do not see any e-mail addy's. :mad:

legion 10-25-2007 06:39 AM

Frogger, do you have a page-sized version of that picture?

Porsche-O-Phile 10-25-2007 06:47 AM

Why doesn't FIA just cut through the crap and say "for the next 10 years, we will only allow Ferrari to compete. All others must park. Oh, and ticket prices will still be $600 each. Pay up".

frogger 10-25-2007 06:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by legion (Post 3551505)
Frogger, do you have a page-sized version of that picture?

No, but I seem to remember seeing it available on t-shirts somewhere on the Internet.

legion 10-25-2007 06:50 AM

I'd like to see F1 go clear the other direction:

"You get X gallons of fuel for each race. Not a drop more. Race what you brought."

scottmandue 10-25-2007 07:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onewhippedpuppy (Post 3551363)
The biggest reason I like F1 is their high level of technical development. F1 cars are the fastest and most developed race cars on earth, shame to see that go away.

Looks like I picked a bad time to become a F1 fan :(

I guess they are striving to become euro-CART... BORING!


http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1193324421.jpg

Jims5543 10-25-2007 07:03 AM

Looking back this past year and last year. Just looking at fastest trap speeds at the end of straights, indicating the cars power and straight line speed as an indicator of who has a powerful engine. Maybe not scientific. I realize downforce plays a lot in this as well but just for yucks......

This past year, both Ferrari and McLaren have very fast cars, they both were tops on the trap speeds many times showing they have very powerful engines.

I also remember Renault had a very fast engine 2 years ago.

Who else seems to have the speed, I remember a couple of other car topping these trap speeds?

I am against the engine freeze 100% but to say this is going to give 1 team (Ferrari) an advantage is not fair. McLaren seems to have the more powerful engine last year constantly topping the speed charts. Renault is not shabby either, neither is BMW.

Honda and Toyota probably have great engines they just have really bad chassis setups. Plus Ferrari is sending engines to 2 other teams next year.


I think removing the TC is a step in the right direction, but when you look at the bigger picture you realize it is dummying down the car more from a technical view.

How do you promote passing without removing the technology? Remove the aero? Again, taking away from developing the car technically.

I really do not know what to do but I believe this one ECU and frozen engines is not the correct steps.

motion 10-25-2007 07:05 AM

Guys, I don't think this means the teams can't keep developing their engines. I think it means that the general spec is frozen; no more changes to induction, fuel-type, displacement, configurations, etc. The teams will always be tweaking what they have for more reliability, horsepower and efficiency.

scottmandue 10-25-2007 07:10 AM

Motion,
I hope you are right, I would really like to see Honda/Toyota/BMW get a shot at winning a few races.

frogger 10-25-2007 07:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim Cesiro
How do you promote passing without removing the technology? Remove the aero? Again, taking away from developing the car technically.

I really do not know what to do but I believe this one ECU and frozen engines is not the correct steps.

Maybe the tracks suck. :)

Dumbing down F1 is great for the small teams without money. I wish F1 could attract more major manufacturers. I suspect that Max's incessant tinkering and rigging the game keeps potential new entries away.

BGCarrera32 10-25-2007 07:28 AM

That and the $50 million dollar buy in price just to get a spot on the list...:eek:

Porsche-O-Phile 10-25-2007 07:33 AM

It seems to me racing bodies suffer from a few of the same problems as politicians: (1) unlimited power, (2) enormous ego, (3) the constant need to satisfy #2 by passing more and more and more and more rules and regulations in order to justify their own existence.

Want better racing? Get rid of as many rules as possible. My ideal racing rulebook would look something like this:

1. Vehicles must be powered solely by drive wheels which remain in constant contact with the ground at all times.

2. Vehicles must have the following safety equipment for drivers/occupants:
-
-
- (list of required stuff)
-
-

3. No deliberate running off or damaging other vehicles.

4. Race starts at 10:00. Have fun.



In other words, build what you want, crew it how you want, use whatever power plant(s) you want, etc. Whatever tires, whatever fuel, etc. Then you'd see real innovation.

Jims5543 10-25-2007 07:33 AM

My first reaction was to agree with the loss of TC and then to remove self shifting trannies and let them stir a shifter so we see races like the "good ole days".

But then I look at the results from the "good ole days" and 1/2 the field retires from every race, then the other 1/2 on track 1-3 cars end up lapping the field 2-4 times in a race.

Today its a feat to lap up to P6 or so and 80-90% of the cars stay in the race.

There were some amazing races this year, most of them rain races and honestly Brazil was pretty exciting, yes P1-P3 remained the same for the entire race pretty much but the mid pack was dicing it up nicely.

If they remove aero, TC, paddle shifters, etc... then it seems they are just going backwards technology wise.

I agree with legion give them X amount of fuel and tell them to build a car to win. Leave it wide open.

Motion - I understand what your saying I understood they can still develop the engine to be more reliable, but I can see the frustration of the fans that want to see the teams come out with advancements in the engines. They can only tweek a little and it would be cool to see one come out with something that turns the sport on its ear again. Limiting revs to 19K is kind of a step backwards if would be neat to see what they could squeeze out of these 2.4 liter engines.

frogger 10-25-2007 07:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim Cesiro
If they remove aero, TC, paddle shifters, etc... then it seems they are just going backwards technology wise.

And these technologies are applicable to road cars.

GDSOB 10-25-2007 07:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Porsche-O-Phile (Post 3551616)
It seems to me racing bodies suffer from a few of the same problems as politicians: (1) unlimited power, (2) enormous ego, (3) the constant need to satisfy #2 by passing more and more and more and more rules and regulations in order to justify their own existence.

Want better racing? Get rid of as many rules as possible. My ideal racing rulebook would look something like this:

1. Vehicles must be powered solely by drive wheels which remain in constant contact with the ground at all times.

2. Vehicles must have the following safety equipment for drivers/occupants:
-
-
- (list of required stuff)
-
-

3. No deliberate running off or damaging other vehicles.

4. Race starts at 10:00. Have fun.



In other words, build what you want, crew it how you want, use whatever power plant(s) you want, etc. Whatever tires, whatever fuel, etc. Then you'd see real innovation.

That was Can-Am. The dominant 917 killed the series.

Aerkuld 10-25-2007 09:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by frogger (Post 3551649)
And these technologies are applicable to road cars.

So road cars don't have traction control, or paddle shifters and aren't reliant on aerodynamics?

Most F1 technology does make it to the street in one form or another eventually. You can also claim that some technology from the street may eventually make it into NASCAR.

legion 10-25-2007 09:40 AM

NASCAR has traction control.

It is officially against the rules. It is implemented through the ignition module (and they still use distributors). It is impossible to detect as it is in a computer program that retards/advances ignition.

I wouldn't be surprised if the same thing happens in F1.

frogger 10-25-2007 09:41 AM

Re-read my sentence Aerkuld. I am saying exactly what you are saying. We are in complete agreement. :)

jyl 10-25-2007 10:45 AM

If F1 didn't have restraints on the designs, we'd have some incredible machines. It would be great for a year or two.

But then I think we'd see the problems. First, only a couple of teams would be left competing for podium, everyone else would be Minardis. Second, the cars would be far beyond the drivers' abilities. Third, many of the older tracks would have to be abandoned, for safety.

Suppose F1 designs were genuinely and literally "unlimited", with no rules other than required safety equipment and using four wheels. (See P-O-P's post for example.)

Imagine what a F1 car with unlimited engine and fuel technology (turbos, turbine, electric, nitromethane, anything), unlimited active suspension control (variable geometry and spring/damping, using inertial and GPS positioning and track maps), unlimited aero (moving airfoils and ground effects), unlimited driver assistance (traction control, stability control, braking assistance, proximity sensing), unlimited communications (real-time two-way data/commands from car to pits) would be like.

Yes, it would have incredible performance. Sort of like a uber-F15 with wheels. 0-60 in <1 sec, >8g's in turns and braking, 300+ mph on straights. But how long could the drivers stay conscious? And how much would they really be "driving" the car, as opposed to the car's computers doing the inputs based on track maps, proximity of other cars, inertial and GPS guidance, and hundreds of sensors?

By the way, it would cost $2BN/yr and the richest team would always win.

legion 10-25-2007 10:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jyl (Post 3552024)
If F1 didn't have restraints on the designs, we'd have some incredible machines. It would be great for a year or two.

But then I think we'd see the problems. First, only a couple of teams would be left competing for podium, everyone else would be Minardis. Second, the cars would be far beyond the drivers' abilities. Third, many of the older tracks would have to be abandoned, for safety.

...

By the way, it would cost $2BN/yr and the richest team would always win.

Explain to me how the above three paragraphs aren't happening now?

And Ferrari seems to have bought itself drivers/constructors championships this season by hampering McLaren on and off the track.

Wickd89 10-25-2007 11:15 AM

so stupid, it must be true.

I guess even developments in weight reduction, size reduction, etc will not be permitted. Really dumb...

Lets see what happens.......

cashflyer 10-25-2007 11:17 AM

Personally, I think they should make the engine rule a challenge for the competitors. Something along the lines of:

Engine may have no more displacement than 3 liters per 360 degrees of crank rotation. Have fun.


When the manufacturers have mastered hyperfast speeds with 3 liters, then drop it to 2.5 liters... etc.

I just feel that you will always need an area for open development to keep F1 from becoming a spec series. Challenging the manufacturers to excel within some engine limit would provide an avenue for development and keep it interesting for us to watch.


Or really screw with the manufacturers and randomly change the formula every year. One year allow engine mods. Next year, allow aero mods. The following year, require each team to use Alonso for at least one event. and so on. :D

Aerkuld 10-25-2007 11:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by frogger (Post 3551886)
Re-read my sentence Aerkuld. I am saying exactly what you are saying. We are in complete agreement. :)

Again?
Sorry, I'm not used to people agreeing with me. :D

Drago 10-25-2007 11:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Porsche-O-Phile (Post 3551616)
It seems to me racing bodies suffer from a few of the same problems as politicians: (1) unlimited power, (2) enormous ego, (3) the constant need to satisfy #2 by passing more and more and more and more rules and regulations in order to justify their own existence.

Want better racing? Get rid of as many rules as possible. My ideal racing rulebook would look something like this:

1. Vehicles must be powered solely by drive wheels which remain in constant contact with the ground at all times.

2. Vehicles must have the following safety equipment for drivers/occupants:
-
-
- (list of required stuff)
-
-

3. No deliberate running off or damaging other vehicles.

4. Race starts at 10:00. Have fun.



In other words, build what you want, crew it how you want, use whatever power plant(s) you want, etc. Whatever tires, whatever fuel, etc. Then you'd see real innovation.

+1, I want to see the best of the best, not this crap.

Drago 10-25-2007 11:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aerkuld (Post 3552105)
Again?
Sorry, I'm not used to people agreeing with me. :D

Clearly, you are a married man.

livi 10-25-2007 11:24 AM

I believe jyl has a point. Is that the reasoning behind the decision maybe or what are their motives ? I wonder what the drivers position on this would be ?

scottmandue 10-25-2007 11:30 AM

As long as we are playing "what if"...
I would keep things pretty much the same, 2.4L, no TC, no active suspension, no forced induction, everyone runs the same fuel.
Also limit areo to nose and tail wings only with nothing allowed between the axles and no active areo.
Then to make things interesting, unlimited tires and unlimited revs.

legion 10-25-2007 11:36 AM

I remember a few years ago some team was doing prototype engines with rotary valves. The FIA squashed it before it ever hit the track.

Too bad, it could have been a great success or a huge failure. We will never know.

w21055 10-25-2007 11:38 AM

It almost seems they want to run a packaged car and let the drivers fight it out.

jluetjen 10-25-2007 11:49 AM

Personally I think that it's a negotiating ploy by Max Mosley. I suspect that at least one of the engine manufactures wasn't "playing ball" in regards to reaching a consensus on the new engine package -- so he threw out the "worst possible" scenario to wake them up.

In regards to HP, the current engine specs were fixed as of the British GP last year, at which time most observers agreed that all of the engines were pretty much at parity for HP. The difference in straight line speed most likely has less to do with gross HP as it does with the efficiency of the aero package. Those who have their aero package optimized can generate the most downforce while still using the least amount of wing. Wings are very draggy and not a particularly efficient means of generating downforce. Those with poor downforce packages have to pile on the wing in order to keep their cornering speeds up. Those teams who also have good mechanical grip can also trim out their wings a little which will also increase their straight line speed.

In the coming years they're also talking about changing the aero rules such that there can not be any overlapping surfaces on the car's body when viewed on the vertical or horizontal axis between virtual boxes where the wings will exist (for tuning purposes). That will do away with the exhaust stacks, "Viking's horns", "X-wings","barge boards", "kick-ups", extended undertrays and other such do-dads which are used for generating downforce on the current cars. Once they do that, I would expect that the cars will start to look more like pre-1970 formula cars!

Aerkuld 10-25-2007 11:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Drago (Post 3552110)
Clearly, you are a married man.

Was, but I'm slowly adjusting!

I would guess that the motivation here was cost saving. But I would think that the engine is an increasingly insignificant part of an F1 teams budget. I would guess that a lot more money gets spent on chassis development and wind tunnel testing among the top teams than would ever be spent on engines. What might be interesting here though is that, while a manufacturer is not permitted to develop an engine or some parts of an engine for ten years, there is presumably nothing to stop new engine manufacturers from joining the party. Maybe this will reopen the door to allow smaller engine manufacturers back into F1?

Aerkuld 10-25-2007 12:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jluetjen (Post 3552173)
Personally I think that it's a negotiating ploy by Max Mosley. I suspect that at least one of the engine manufactures wasn't "playing ball" in regards to reaching a consensus on the new engine package -- so he threw out the "worst possible" scenario to wake them up.

In regards to HP, the current engine specs were fixed as of the British GP last year, at which time most observers agreed that all of the engines were pretty much at parity for HP. The difference in straight line speed most likely has less to do with gross HP as it does with the efficiency of the aero package. Those who have their aero package optimized can generate the most downforce while still using the least amount of wing. Wings are very draggy and not a particularly efficient means of generating downforce. Those with poor downforce packages have to pile on the wing in order to keep their cornering speeds up. Those teams who also have good mechanical grip can also trim out their wings a little which will also increase their straight line speed.

In the coming years they're also talking about changing the aero rules such that there can not be any overlapping surfaces on the car's body when viewed on the vertical or horizontal axis between virtual boxes where the wings will exist (for tuning purposes). That will do away with the exhaust stacks, "Viking's horns", "X-wings","barge boards", "kick-ups", extended undertrays and other such do-dads which are used for generating downforce on the current cars. Once they do that, I would expect that the cars will start to look more like pre-1970 formula cars!

Completely agree!
Which brings me back to aero and wind tunnels being a large part of a top F1 team's budget. Assuming the engines are pretty much equal then the biggest difference between a top team and the back of the grid is aero. I would think that there will be very little financial benefit for teams due to engine change rules. I am fairly sure that the way to close up the grid and to save money is to restrict the aero. I like the ideas that are listed above and a coupke of us in the office have been talking about the possibility of single plane wings, or maybe even a spec wing, for sometime. I honestly believe that we would see much closer racing if down force was massively reduced. Heck - what about banning the use of a wing or any down force generating surface in front of the front axle line?
Why don't they just put Jackie Stewart in charge? He'd sort it out I'm sure.

frogger 10-25-2007 12:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aerkuld
Why don't they just put Jackie Stewart in charge? He'd sort it out I'm sure.

Great idea. Max, give your best buddy Jackie a call and ask him to help you out. ;)

jyl 10-25-2007 01:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by legion (Post 3552050)
Explain to me how the above three paragraphs aren't happening now?

It would be happening far worse than it is happening now.

Basically you'd have something like fighter planes/missiles, where there are no limits except physics and money.

One or two teams would have F15's, all the rest would have MIG23's, and races would simply be watching the MIGs get splashed over and over and over. Fun the first couple times but ultimately a yawner.

sammyg2 10-25-2007 02:56 PM

Quote:

Imagine what a F1 car with unlimited engine and fuel technology (turbos, turbine, electric, nitromethane, anything), unlimited active suspension control (variable geometry and spring/damping, using inertial and GPS positioning and track maps), unlimited aero (moving airfoils and ground effects), unlimited driver assistance (traction control, stability control, braking assistance, proximity sensing), unlimited communications (real-time two-way data/commands from car to pits) would be like.
Oh man, that's what I'm talking about.
F1 should be leading edge technology, not a spec racing series.


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