Well, let's name some technologies that have EVER been developed in F1 or racing in general, and pushed out to consumer use.WhiteBlue wrote:I can't remember that he has proved anything like that. If I remember right he just made a bunch of assertions. To prove something like that you have to review a bunch of business data that nobody would reveal to this forum.mx_tifosi wrote: Jersey Tom has been the most prominent in proving over and over again that this is not necessary nor realistic.
Radial tires? No. Developed for consumer vehicles first, race application lagged a couple decades.
Electronic fuel injection? No. Developed in the consumer market, lagged race for decades as well.
High performance airfoils? No. Already heaps of research done, particularly for the military in the 2nd World War. Took a long time for someone to think to apply it to a car.
Applied vehicle dynamics? No.
Micro hydraulics? No. Developed outside of racing.
Traction control? No. Developed on consumer cars, brought to racing.
Sequential transmissions? Don't believe so.
Monocoque load-bearing frames and structures? No.
Formula 1 has historically been a good place for the creative application of technology which is developed outside the world of racing. It has never been a breeding ground for road-relevant technology. Don't need any business data to show that. The notion to make a magic change and have F1 spin off all these relevant technologies for your average Joe is just silly. Certain suppliers (like the Michelin example) like to make links between Race and Consumer development but it's really a stretch.
Look at the cars themselves. What's the consumer relevance of an open-wheel car? The Model T was kind of open wheel but we don't use those too often anymore. What's the relevance of developing cars to go as fast as possible when your average driver is worried about ride, noise, and if their car works with their Bluetooth hands-free?
What is racing or F1 specifically really going to contribute? What are a handful of teams with budgets in the tens to even hundreds of millions of dollars going to do? Put that in comparison to Ford Motor Company.. with an R&D budget somewhere in the 6-8 billion dollar range. I like this quote from a few years ago..
Environmentally friendly technology will be developed, but it's comical to think that anything substantial is going to fall out of race applications. The whole 'green' racing concept is just masturbation.Ford's annual US$8 billion R&D budget would fully fund at least 3 entire seasons of Formula 1 - for all 11 teams, each with 2 primary cars and 1 backup, with their own engine development and construction teams, driver salaries - everything