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Launched in 2005, this website started out as a dedicated F1 forum (hence FORUM…ula1.com) offering debate and banter on all aspects of Formula One and other motorsport categories.
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Why this talk of fuel cells, then we'll have electric F1 cars sounding like milk floats.
"Relevance" is a red herring. If you carry the "relevance" theme to its logical end, F1 should be driving stock cars. Not NASCAR stock cars, showroom stock cars. There is no logical stopping point between here and there.
F1 isn't, has never been and should never be about relevance. It's entertainment. It's escapism. It's about living vicariously through the exploits of men with stones of tungsten carbide who spit in the face of death to race at breakneck speeds. It should remain something beyond reality. It best serves that role if its cars remain representative of something you only could hope to own if you win the national lottery.
The I-4 engine formula allegedly will be cheaper to build and operate as well as more fuel efficient than the current V-8 or a blown V-6. It would be keeping to the spirit and best traditions of F1 if the teams were allowed to build the best blown I-4 that their technology and budget will allow. But if he teams employ SOTA materials and technology, they will thwart the FIA rationale. So the FIA must impose all manner of further artificial restrictions, bringing F1 another step closer to (some would say beyond) being a spec series.
The FIA hope to achieve a 35% increase in petrol mileage. If successful, that still would come to less than 5.5 mpg (US), 47 litres/100 km. This green movement in F1 will in no wise be satisfied with 47 l/100 km so that 35% can only be the first step toward this:
Ecclestone probably wont live to 2013 to put up a fight.
Ecclestone probably wont live to 2013 to put up a fight.
Ecclestone probably wont live to 2013 to put up a fight.
Playing devil's advocate...
Can anyone provide a single reason the new engines will ruin the sport? So far all I'm hearing is "Waaaaahhhhh I don't like change!!!!!" - indeed, that's basically Ferrari's reaction to everything, because they think they're running the show.
However, I seem to recall we heard very similar whining about moving from V10s to V8s.
It's been a while and...Nobody cares. Indeed, now we have people whining about moving from the V8s.
I just can't really see the point, it strikes me as making a major change for the sake of it.
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