- 25 Oct 09, 13:34#165623In theory, if all the teams have KERS, then overtaking should be enhanced. If a faster driver with KERS is behind a slower driver, then the slower driver will have to use KERS to defend, while the faster driver will be able to hod on without using it. Then later in the lap, the slower driver will have an exhausted KERS, while the faster driver has both a faster car, and KERS. Hence an overtake.
Unfortunately, this theory falls down completely when you have a track with only one or two overtaking opportunities. As the slower driver only has to defend once or twice a lap.
Yep, as we've seen with Kovalainen ALL SEASON. The boost time should be halved and the power (at least) doubled. I swear more people would have taken KERS on if you could just use it to develop as much power as possible rather than being restricted to 80hp - another example of poorly conceived and overbearing rules in F1.
:rolleyes: I hate the FIA trying to make F1 look green. It's like throwing a piece of lettuce on top of 60 oz steak.
Formula isn't green, and it more than likely will never be green, until everyone drive's hydrogen powered cars, and we all fly on zero emission flights. It's all pathetic in my opinion. If they FIA actually want to do something green, they want to look the amount air miles F1 does.
I like that analogy.

All the green stuff only came in because it was the flavour of the month, now it's all about cost cutting, so these technological steps forward like KERS have been convieniently and quietly shelved for the moment.
Rising number one of Formula 1, Juan - Juan, one wonders should Juan only win one Formula 1 one year, would Juan have won that one in round one, Juan??