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11 Apr 2024, 19:50 (Ref:4204681) | #4301 | |||
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Richard |
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11 Apr 2024, 22:52 (Ref:4204704) | #4302 | ||
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I'm still firmly in the position that they need to un-restrict testing.
If a team wants to boot around a test track as part of their BUDGET CAP then why shouldn't they be able to? I liked the 2003 season when four teams chose to run extra on Friday instead of in-season testing too, that was a cool concept. Did nothing for any of them except maybe Renault but cool nonetheless |
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12 Apr 2024, 01:26 (Ref:4204709) | #4303 | |
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Regardless of how much testing they should do (unrestricted or just more), I feel they have too little testing as it is. So I agree they should be allowed more. I however suspect that short of teams that are having serious correlation issues (reality not matching their models and/or scale testing) they may feel it's more cost effective to do a combination of inhouse physical unit/component testing (shaker rigs, chassis dynos, etc.), virtual integration testing (simulators) and testing at events (laps during FP1).
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13 Apr 2024, 01:05 (Ref:4204813) | #4304 | |
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Mercedes was spending 100's of millions a year making the perfectly tuned damper for each track. They got too complicated and expensive. But they would be fine as a spec part. Like the wheel covers are now. The same happened to wheel covers. They got banned and made spec later.
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13 Apr 2024, 01:08 (Ref:4204814) | #4305 | |
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This is what happened to a car with a slight DRS failure. A front wing mechanism would have to have 2 actuators. One for each side. So at minimum, we are increasing this risk by 3x. It is not even safely feasible to even think about doing this. Imagine one half of the front wing stays open or finds itself out of sync with the other ? It would make this crash look like bumper cars. Or the front out of sync with the back. There would need to be fighter jet level redundancy. Which means weight.
Unless something changed fundamentally with these regs, we will either have extremely dangerous cars or cars that are heavier than the 2022-25 cars. Slower, quieter and heavier. |
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13 Apr 2024, 01:10 (Ref:4204815) | #4306 | |
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I cant explain what i mean but you kinda summed it up. Its too "perfect". Like in Suzuka both the initial start and the second start looked identical by both Red Bulls for example.
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13 Apr 2024, 03:34 (Ref:4204822) | #4307 | |||
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13 Apr 2024, 03:57 (Ref:4204823) | #4308 | |||
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You would hope that given how advanced these cars are that they are not doing blue smoke launches! You have massive data about the tires, the grip level of the circuit, the weather conditions, the clutch (including it's activation point). With all of that you can get very controlled hard launches with no or minimal wheel spin. This would be an open loop system that is not directly measuring wheel slippage. It's complex, but doable as you see at each race. The rules say... Quote:
A purely closed loop traction control system (which does measure wheelspin and acts upon it) can be brutally simple to implement, highly effective, highly consistent and would not require any driver skill which is why it would be the first choice if not banned. The rules could be tightened, but it would be an arms race and hard to regulate. Even without all of the explicit aids, it would be generally easy to create some optimal procedure that if followed by the driver would still produce pretty good launces. I think the FIA knows it's a loosing battle to try to regulate out the ability for teams to generate good launches. Richard |
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14 Apr 2024, 00:18 (Ref:4204892) | #4309 | ||
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As to testing. I still not sure whats stopping a team building a "Formula None" car.
It not an f1 car even though it looks amazingly like one, then sticking it on a non f1 track like donnington or whatever on random days. Hell if the owner of the F1 team also happened to own a F0 team, that got to "borrow" f1 teams factory and personel some days, for $1 a day, then its out side salary cap and nothing to do with f1 if mclaren/williams etc can own f1 team touring car, supercars, or indy car, they could also own a f0 division |
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14 Apr 2024, 07:45 (Ref:4204905) | #4310 | |||
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Because the auditors that monitor the budget cap already scrutinise spending on alternative spending and income. They have to because it's not on McLaren that produces supercars, it's also Red Bull plus, of course, Mercedes with their luxury/AMG type vehicles and engines that they supply to supercar producers. All the teams already have to show the auditors how they allocate spending that streams from the overall business to make sure that they are not bending the cap rules. |
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14 Apr 2024, 11:11 (Ref:4204922) | #4311 | |
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I just read this on motorsport.com https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/s...mula/10597236/ .Interesting and strange prospect to contemplate.I find myself wondering if the MGU-H should have been made a standard part and supplied by the FIA to keep the efficiency level high and avoid the need for costly development.I find the prospect of watching mobile generators racing to be only a tiny bit more appealing than watching Formula E.Or any other spec car formula come to that.
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14 Apr 2024, 23:19 (Ref:4204993) | #4312 | |||
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15 Apr 2024, 06:51 (Ref:4205004) | #4313 | |||
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We've already touched upon that subject at the bottom of reply 4245: https://tentenths.com/forum/showpost...postcount=4245 Quote:
The manufactures were dead set on a 50/50. Well it's exactly this high percentage of electricity is what causes problems. Problems regarding efficiency and with regards to it being basically a generator not being a combustion engine any more in a normal motorsport/ petrol head sense. As said the RPM and volume will not correspond any more to the drivers input, which to me is the foundation of combustion based motorsport. The decisions to stick with the larger wheels, will also cause more drag, forcing to go more extreme on the active aero to compensate for the lost efficiency elsewhere. This in turn has compromised the aero balance even more due to the active aero only working on the rear, so now they need it at the front as well to keep it balanced, making things again heavier and more complicated. All this mess because the manufacturers are so dead set on their 50/50 split. If the drivers were organized and savvy enough they would collectively point out "no we're not gonna go along with that". That's not gonna happen though and because the decision making process is not changing, this stuff will keep happening. For me personally if 2026 indeed turns out like I fear, I probably will stop following F1. |
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15 Apr 2024, 12:25 (Ref:4205032) | #4314 | |
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If every expert and I'm gonna turn off from F1 online actually did F1 wouldn't have made it out of the 70s. For all the doom and gloom over the last 20 years amazing drivers and teams have figured everything out each time
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15 Apr 2024, 12:50 (Ref:4205034) | #4315 | ||
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15 Apr 2024, 13:26 (Ref:4205038) | #4316 | |
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I think the Motorsport article that P38 linked to is spot on. As to 2026+ being a disaster. I tend to think it will not be a massive "oh no" moment, but rather a series of "oh, that's weird and not ideal" scenarios such as the one Newey calls out about the engines acting as generators in very low speed corners. As I mentioned earlier, I think it was a mistake to not try to solve chassis and power unit rules at same time. It seems they pushed hard on the power unit ones to attract the likes of Porsche, Audi and even Honda. The ICE vs. electric split seemed pretty arbitrary. They should have set car performance goals first. Things they wanted to see (cars not slower on straights) and things they didn't want to see (maybe something like excessive "ICE as generator") and then worked backwards to see what might have been an appropriate power split between the two. I think there was a desire to NOT mess with the basic architecture of the ICE short of removing MGU-H.
I think as long as we have large manufactures in the sport... and are in the sport to showcase "road relevance" this is going to continue to be an issue. As to being a fan and what I will do for 2026. I hope it does work out. I expect that short of it being an absolutely unwatchable disaster I will stay. Frankly if there is drama, sadly that is another reason to watch. Sometimes watching a dumpster fire can be entertaining! Richard |
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15 Apr 2024, 14:00 (Ref:4205044) | #4317 | |
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Unrelated to 2026 technical regulations, there is some rumors around the 2026-2030 Concorde Agreement. Saward comments on rumors in this most recent update...
https://joesaward.wordpress.com/2024...rom-kankujima/ Key points... * Mostly same as current agreement * Some teams looking to reduce financial bonus for Ferrari * Talk about preventing anyone from owning more than one team * Limit to just 10 team. So the last one is interesting in that is just avoid the entire topic of "how much higher does the anti-dilution fee need to be for Andretti or anyone else". Basically just no new entries! Problem solved. As these are reported by Joe and not yet a finalized agreement, things might change, but if true, it pretty much confirms the speculation of "Andretti, just try again next time" as being a completely empty offer. I have no clue what level of anti-competitive aspects might apply to this (if any). Can Liberty even do this arbitrarily? Would they need to have FIA agree to this? If it doesn't get limited to 10 teams, I expect the anti-dilution fees to be so high/onerous as to still effectively prevent any new teams. The next to last item on preventing anyone from owning two teams. IMHO, if they limit F1 to just 10 teams, they absolutely need to stop anyone from owning more than one team. I expect if that makes it through, it might have to be some long term divestiture plan to ensure the current owner is able to sell at a premium vs. it being a distressed sell. Even then, it might be hard to get them to agree to this new limitation. Richard |
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15 Apr 2024, 15:47 (Ref:4205054) | #4318 | |||
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speculation on my part, but full electric, self driving tech, desire to turn everything into a SUV/crossover, their car's ability to sync to your cell phone and sound system...none of which are things you are going to develop within a racing series (i hope). sure some of their higher end offerings (more for Ferrari and the others with hypercar programs) the engineering experience carries over but that alone doesn't make for relevance for the vast majority of cars they sell. imo its very possible to argue that going forward, the manus reason for being in F1 is so far removed from road relevance/technology transfer to road cars that they dont really need to be in F1 for that reason. more so if they are losing (Renault/Alpine for example) because then it just hurts their brand image. while F1 is a hot commodity today, then sure they can sell their team for a premium but what happens if the 2026 regs fall flat or the fickle social media crowd move on to the next cool thang? the purpose of more than 10 teams is precisely because manus come and go and you need to hedge against there being less than 10 teams... Bernie knew this but Liberty may have to learn about it the hard way? |
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15 Apr 2024, 15:49 (Ref:4205056) | #4319 | ||||
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It might be bad, but it also might be no worse than blown diffuser sounds. By all means the 2026 might be a disaster or they might (just) make it happen (Renault teams could hardly complete 2 laps during testing in 2014, yet most Renault cars finished the opening Grand Prix of the season) -- all we know is it WILL be amusing spectating! Quote:
It's much more difficult for a team to go bankrupt than in the days of Prost, Jordan or Manor, when the below 10th place teams were specifically at greater risk of going bankrupt due to no prize money for11th, 12th and 13th WCC. Quote:
What next, condemning Honda and Red Bull for being committed enough to Grand Prix racing to own Grand Prix circuits and host Grand Prixs, where other entrants like Mercedes-Benz don't even both to sponsor their own domestic German Grand Prix let alone own the circuit... Last edited by V8 Fireworks; 15 Apr 2024 at 16:03. |
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15 Apr 2024, 16:27 (Ref:4205061) | #4320 | ||||||||
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15 Apr 2024, 16:58 (Ref:4205068) | #4321 | |
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We do need to open it to more teams. We can’t 100% rely on the current teams
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15 Apr 2024, 21:54 (Ref:4205084) | #4322 | |||
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The only 'technology' that actually seems to differentiate the teams is intellectual aerodynamic understanding. And that is creating differences measured in tenths of a second between the ten teams over a 3-4 mile distance, less on some circuits. The relative differences are very small in terms of overall time and speed, and in my opinion, aerodynamic understanding should not be the sole issue deciding whether championships are won or lost. That is why I don't regard the current regulations and millions spent on development as particularly useful. We need a ruleset that will actually focus more on mechanical knowledge in roadholding/handling engineering. It would be far more useful. One of the problems is that we want 'close racing' and 'overtaking' so the rule makers fiddle with creating a formula that creates artificially close racing and overtaking because appearance means more than anything substantial.... |
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15 Apr 2024, 23:32 (Ref:4205087) | #4323 | ||
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I struggle to understand the link between that opinion and your comments? They feel like two unrelated topics. Per the regulations components fit into four categories... * Listed Team Component (LTC) * Standard Supply Component (SSC) * Transferable Component (TRC) * Open Source Component (OSC) The secret sauce for teams exist in the LTC items. I am not worried about the other items. So for LTC, aero is listed as LTC. That is an example of what I am talking about. The regulations are pretty strict about transfer or replication of a teams LTC designs. However you can't stop people from knowing what they know. For example if I am an aerodynamicist working along side Newey, and assuming he doesn't keep secrets from me, I expect it would be quite the education! If I am to leave to go to another team, RBR is going to require gardening leave for me. In the hopes that by the time I can take my new knowledge elsewhere, that it is stale. That is how LTC knowledge passes around in a legitimate way. They are not taking a "design" with them, but there is a technical concept that defines the secret sauce. They are taking knowledge of how it works with them. Common ownership creates unhealthy squishiness in how easily this can happen. That is more of what I was trying to cover. To your comments... Previous regulations seems to be overly power unit focuses. So Mercedes got it right and dominated for a long time. The pendulum has swung to an aero focuses solution. Red Bull Racing got it right so they are dominating. So you say that aero knowledge should not be the deciding factor. What if I say I agree? But you say the rules should reward mechanical design and elevate "roadholding/handling engineering". What happens when history repeats itself and some team figures out some new trick, others can't replicate and then dominate in the new "suspension era"? You might argue... Well suspension design is well understood and there are no big tricks left. I personally think that a big part of Red Bull Racing's dominance is how the have made their aero solution work in coordination with excellent mechanical solutions. For example look at how well Red Bull is able to manage tire degradation to a level that other teams struggle with. That is likely as much a mechanical solution as it is an aero one. It could be that Red Bull Racing is laugh up their sleeve as teams focus heavily on trying to replicate their aero solutions when maybe the secret is elsewhere! Red Bull changed their aero concept for this year and are still dominating! I could be wrong, but imagine if this is right? As to those creating the technical regulations creating artificial ways to generate close racing and passing. Do we really think it's an easy job to generate the close racing and lack of dominance we as fans want? Fans clearly think it is easy. People toss out ideas like "no aero" and then someone will show simulated car performance and it is not pretty (very slow lap times, poor cornering, etc.). People talk about reducing the car weight, but the cars are saddled with heavy power units driven by manufacture "road relevancy" requirements, pressure from tire suppliers for more commonality with other series for tires and a never ending set of safety improvements which are fantastic, but also bring weight. Not to mention, I really think teams like the idea of lighter cars in general, but are hesitant to commit to doing it because it becomes another area in which they must develop, but may not be a differentiator in the end. They want to keep the areas of potential development as small as possible so as they know where to devote limited funding resources. I mean if they were to ditch the complex power units and go with a high performance ICE solution (which I would love to see) they could make a smaller and lighter car, but it will never be as small and as light as decades past for safety reasons. Richard Last edited by Richard C; 15 Apr 2024 at 23:44. |
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16 Apr 2024, 01:50 (Ref:4205093) | #4324 | |
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Apologies for any snarkiness in my posts today. I am battling a cold and I am not the best version of myself at the moment.
Richard |
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16 Apr 2024, 04:31 (Ref:4205098) | #4325 | |||
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Frank Dernie, Williams: Quote:
Dernie does say you need: 1) the right tyre temperature, 2) downforce,3) power. But as long as you have the right tyre temperature (as Mercedes often do not in 2024 with their wild performnace swings), then suspension is not that important. Anyway with the right tyre models and right tyre temperatures, the better teams like Red Bull with ex-Michelin engineer Pierre Wieche have "roadholding/handling engineering" or more specifically tyre engineering and tyre understanding and modelling sorted at the moment. As I said, suspension and tyre usage needs to right to avoid excessive tyre wear a la Ferrari and HAAS in 2023, but as long as it's right you then are not going to gain seconds more in laptime from that unlike aerodynamics. Some of the less wise teams dissolved their tyre modelling department after the tyre war years and had to recover from that! |
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