Hi everyone (i'm new)

, i've been following this site/forum for a while, thought i'd finally sign up, and just wanted to put a few thoughts out there which, in my reading, i don't think have been covered in particular (and i hope aren't stating the obvious

).
OK, so with kers we have two basic options, mechanical or electrical, and the general idea is to make F1 more efficient and 'green' through using these systems. However, i get the impression (though i don't know what the exact regulations are/will be) that the systems could be (ab)used for quite the opposite effect. I think the only way for this to be a 'green' technology is if it is mandated that energy stored can
only be obtained under braking. Will this be the case?
If it isn't then would the following system be plausible? In the case of a mechanical system; when the
engine is no longer engaged under braking, rather than simply disconnecting the
engine and allowing the revs to fall, would it not be better for a team to simply maintain the
engine revs while braking and send that surplus power to a flywheel instead? That way the car can accumulate power it would otherwise have been unable to utilise during the corner. Once the driver accelerates, the
engine is (obviously) sending power to the rear wheels again, but with the assistance of the energy it stored during the turn, recovered from the flywheel. Naturally, the flywheel is acting as a capacitor so replace it with an electric motor and a few real capacitors and you have the same effect.
With such a system, you could have the
engine running at full power for pretty much the whole lap, which in my mind would give an obvious performance advantage. However this is anything but 'green' as these systems were intended. Or am i missing the point entirely?