http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson ... f1_sc.html
Joe Saward has something on this too I think but may still be a bit too emotional

Bottom line. Isn't it time Bernie retired and stopped tinkering?!
I would argue that, and suggest it's more down to comedy tyresj2 lot wrote:This year has probably been the best start to an F1 season for a long time, 7 different winners in 7 races ffs.One of the reasons that has been touted for this is that the regulations remained pretty much the same and teams caught up, so you have the nearest thing to a level playing field there has been for a long time.
I'm not sure I disagree with you, but to play Devils advocate, I'd suggest that F1 is supposed to be the pinnacle of technology in motorsport.Scuffers wrote:
F1 is supposed to be about the pinnacle of single seater racing, to then foist boring/sad/gutless engines on it is laughable.
well, you have just fallen at the first hurdle...Stevoraith wrote:I'm not sure I disagree with you, but to play Devils advocate, I'd suggest that F1 is supposed to be the pinnacle of technology in motorsport.Scuffers wrote:
F1 is supposed to be about the pinnacle of single seater racing, to then foist boring/sad/gutless engines on it is laughable.
The engine rules they are talking about will give engines with the same or more power but using a third less fuel. That doesn't sound boring or gutless or sad to me, more like forcing the development of new technologies which brings us back to what F1 is all about......
If you read the article they are attempting to slow the cars down by changes to the aero rules, not by cutting the power of the engines.
not even close, show me a 3L 120 degree V10 in a road car that does 22,000Rpm?campbell wrote:V8s, and V10s before them, were essentially road car engines, were they not. Certainly plenty of them kicking about on the streets today.
As for your proposal on fuel, they're halfway there already - no refuelling at pitstops now. Not sure if tank limitations are by regs or by packaging, but they're there.
In real terms, how much slower is an F1 car today than, say, 30 years ago? Are we allowed to factor safety developments into this equation too?
OK. 3-0 Scuffers. Next up?!Scuffers wrote:not even close, show me a 3L 120 degree V10 in a road car that does 22,000Rpm?campbell wrote:V8s, and V10s before them, were essentially road car engines, were they not. Certainly plenty of them kicking about on the streets today.
As for your proposal on fuel, they're halfway there already - no refuelling at pitstops now. Not sure if tank limitations are by regs or by packaging, but they're there.
In real terms, how much slower is an F1 car today than, say, 30 years ago? Are we allowed to factor safety developments into this equation too?
as for speed, yes, 20-30 years ago the cars were 5-8 sec's a lap faster - (look it up), and that's in qualifying pace, race pace the difference is even greater.