If I'm right (let me know

So, what happens in 2008 and the gearboxes have to last forur races? How will teams adjust gear ratios for each track?

Not “around maximum torque” but “around maximum power rpm”.Ciro Pabòn wrote: When you are chosing your gear ratios, you want to run the engine around the point of maximum torque
Again, to keep the engine at the rpm of maximum power attainable, not torque. To maximise torque at the wheels you have to keep the engine at maximum power rpm.Ciro Pabòn wrote: The ideal would be to have a variable gear box: this gearbox would change your gear ratio automatically and continously to keep the engine at the maximum torque attainable
Because the cadence only varies by 40rpm that makes gear ratios even more important than in a car. I find myself constantly shifting when I bicycle to keep the cadence within a specific range, especially because muscles can tire so easily. This is the same reason you see diesel trucks with obscene numbers of gear ratios, because the diesel engine only operates effectively in a narrow RPM range. I think you can say that the number of gear ratios are a function of the powerband of the engine operating them. Alas, Renault only needed 6 gears in 2005.The best cadence is a balance between leg speed and pedal pressure, but as a cyclist puts more energy into the task, both increase. So, the non-cyclist will pedal at 60 rpm going 10 miles an hour, the tourist will spin at 80 rpm going 15 miles an hour, and the racer will twirl at 100 rpm going 20 miles an hour.