Post here all non technical related topics about Formula One. This includes race results, discussions, testing analysis etc. TV coverage and other personal questions should be in Off topic chat.
I can shoot a gas tank of a car with a gun. It wont explode. Did you know that?
Anyway who can honestly say this is the best of F1 they have ever watch.
Raise of hands by a post please. I don't think those of us who support refueling a crazy or from a different planet, we sense that something is lacking in the quality of the racing. This is based on our perception of entertainment agree?
Is it wrong for us to genuinely find something boring? Why is it that half of us want refueling back? Can that be explained. Are we crazy?
ringo wrote:I can shoot a gas tank of a car with a gun. It wont explode. Did you know that?
Anyway who can honestly say this is the best of F1 they have ever watch.
Raise of hands by a post please. I don't think those of us who support refueling a crazy or from a different planet, we sense that something is lacking in the quality of the racing. This is based on our perception of entertainment agree?
Is it wrong for us to genuinely find something boring? Why is it that half of us want refueling back? Can that be explained. Are we crazy?
I won't make the statement that this has been the most exciting season ever (I'm partial to the footage from 1967, personally), but refueling isn't the way to go for F1 to remain "relevant" while increasing speed and "racing" spectacle.
The answer is lifting restrictions on battery capacity and use. This immediately reflects the needs for better electric technology in road vehicles. Unlimited use necessitates fast recharging or expanded capacity (smaller cells with fast reload, or longer-endurance via larger packs). One notion would be to have a fast-swap pack that can be done during a pit-stop. Either way, the possibilities are far more numerous and ably executed before being clamped down on by the regulations. And, if one wasn't limited to just an extra 80bhp, then you would have driver's being pushed to their limit by judging when to use their systems. The added variance from the different battery solutions could be that element that takes away from the aero-heavy developments, if not adds to the technical drama of F1.
First, I want Refueling back because now when cars get passed they pit immediately to retain their position. I hate that tactic because it favors the leading drivers too much and turns the race into a chess game. Second, i feel the "fastest lap" stat is sacred. Now anyone can get a fast lap in a race. With 2 laps left to go in a race even a Lotus can throw on some super softs and set the fastest lap. Third, i can't tell what the hell is going on when i watch live timing anymore. It's hard to figure out if a car is driving fast or just on fresher tires because the fastest lap is always decreasing until the final lap. I really miss refueling and want it back.
ringo wrote:I can shoot a gas tank of a car with a gun. It wont explode. Did you know that?
Anyway who can honestly say this is the best of F1 they have ever watch.
Raise of hands by a post please. I don't think those of us who support refueling a crazy or from a different planet, we sense that something is lacking in the quality of the racing. This is based on our perception of entertainment agree?
Is it wrong for us to genuinely find something boring? Why is it that half of us want refueling back? Can that be explained. Are we crazy?
What refuelling does is make the racing different. Some people like it some don't. Its a matter of opinion, not a matter of truth.
Before I do anything I ask myself “Would an idiot do that?” And if the answer is yes, I do not do that thing. - Dwight Schrute
Diesel wrote:Here's the reason pit stops in general are unsafe:-
That's the beauty of pit stops. The work is shared over a big team. Every man is taking a little task and responsibility. Everything has to work together like a machine with high speed and precision. The timing of the stop has to be perfect which is lifting the sport from a physical exercise to a game of chess. Brainpower and understanding of the situations becomes vital.
You can have all of that with a pit crew half the size. Why is F1 still using trolley jacks? IndyCar his built in pneumatic jacks built in to the cars which activates when the fuel nozzle is attached.
"Unbelievable how silly this Formula 1 is these days, with this stupid overtakes." —Sebastian Vettel, 2012 US GP
Diesel wrote:You can have all of that with a pit crew half the size. Why is F1 still using trolley jacks? IndyCar his built in pneumatic jacks built in to the cars which activates when the fuel nozzle is attached.
Yeah, or design robots that do the tire changes so no one is at risk...or limit the pit crew to one guy who has to run around to each tire and take it off and replace it. 2 minute pit stops here we come!
Diesel wrote:You can have all of that with a pit crew half the size. Why is F1 still using trolley jacks? IndyCar his built in pneumatic jacks built in to the cars which activates when the fuel nozzle is attached.
Why should they even bother about reducing the crew? Every man has one single task. It is fine.
If there are too many dudes at a F1 pit stop, lets do the following tings;
1] Reduce the ammount of people in the pit box to 2 people per wheel and the front and rear jack guys. The lollypop guy should be the 11th man. 2] Make the guys wait till the car has came to a stop in the box before they can go and start work. 3] The driver cant leave the box till all the guys are back in the garrage, with exclusion to the lolypop guy. 4] If you want refueling back, this is a seprate stop, no tyrs can be put on the car when refueling takes place. 5] Banning of teams stacking cars or pitting cars on the same lap (even if the 2 cars are on 2 diffrent laps, the driver that pits closest to the lead lap is the lap number thats taken) 6] Front jack has to be completly straight on to the car, no Mercedes/Ferarri style front jacks.
This will lead to longer pit stops and also lead to teams splitting strategies and mixing races up one hell of a lot. Also means that drivers that look after their tyres will have more to gain.
Lets try and take someting more to give more different stratagies towards the teams. More time in the pitlane will mean that more teams will try and make their Pirellis last longer.
No. Just no. I don't like that it's even been proposed here. (I sincerely mean no offense or disrespect by saying that.)
There's simply nothing else in motorsport like an F1 pit stop. The execution of so much within such a short span is a breath of poetry, a peculiar harmony of dissonance that somehow has the grace of a ballet. A lot of me wants refueling back just to add that extra bit of texture to a pit stop's beauty. Actually, that's mostly the reason.
We've got DRS and rules for using different tire compounds and part-time KERS and gimmicks everywhere. I know I'm probably nuts, but can we just leave this one little thing alone? Please? Can we have one part of F1 that's a no-holds-barred contest of quickness?
It's all still light years away from the ethos I'd really like to see: "I'm going to do 300 km as fast as I can, however I can; you do 300 km as fast as you can, however you can. We'll all do that, and let's see who does it best." But, it's something.
I think, at some point, some of you who want to see all of these radical changes need to really ask yourself if you might just be better off with another form of entertainment. (Again, I mean no disrespect at all.)