roblomas52 wrote:mario wrote:Wallio wrote:I've said it before and I'll say it again, F1 needs refueling again.
As I've said before, I do not think that refuelling is, strictly speaking, that necessary to the sport - refuelling only occurred in a minority of the races that have occurred in F1, even when it was perfectly legal to do so, and outside of F1 mid race refuelling stops are only really common in endurance racing (where they are a necessity) and, I believe, IndyCar racing.
Because Indy cars are flat out arround the ovals which means they are sucking more fuel out of the tanks to make them go flat out and Indy car races are longer than f1 as well
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:Which makes me wonder what an IndyCar race would be like without refuelling... it'd be tougher on the drivers, for starters...
I suppose it'd depend on how high the fuel effect was, though - starting on a full race's worth of fuel would probably slow the cars down in the opening phase of the race a fair bit.
go_Rubens wrote:BlindCaveSalamander wrote:go_Rubens wrote:F1 should have one type of engine and just stick with it. New engines only raise costs, not lower them.
That in and of itself isn't the problem. It's that the rules for the new engines are too free, which allows for development costs to spiral out of control.
Now, I understand. Thanks, mate!
The thing is, I'd argue that the engine regulations are still fairly tight compared to the regulations on aerodynamics and chassis development. Equally, it comes down, to a certain extent, to the issue that the FIA wanted the new engines to offer opportunities for transferring technology to road cars in order to attract manufacturers, which implies that there will have to permit some development work on the engines.
That said, Auto Motor und Sport is already talking about restrictions on engine development kicking in as soon as 2016, with the engine specification being entirely frozen by 2018. http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... 76535.html
Overall, I would imagine that there are only two outfits that would be pushing for engine development to take precedent over aerodynamics, which would be Mercedes and Ferrari. For most of the other competitors it is to their advantage to push for laxer regulations on aerodynamics than engines, especially for outfits like Red Bull that derive their competitive advantage from the high emphasis on aerodynamics (they have publicly complained that the new regulations give more power to the manufacturers). I do agree that there are legitimate concerns about costs when it comes to engines, but don't think that the cost argument is being made with truly altruistic intentions by all parties.