Please no more neutering. Drivers used to do whole laps of Monaco with only one hand on the wheel because they had to stick shift at the helm of 1500hp quali spec engines.Websta wrote:Perhaps they could develop a system where the DRS will close if the car senses a loss of rear wheel traction.
Why would they drop it quali ? Surely, having a DRS wing that you can't use in quali wouldn't cost that much, I mean if you couldn't use DRS in quali you'd still want it in the race. It's a powerfull tool to have, even if it's only for sunday.timbo wrote:If DRS would be banned in qualifying most teams would simply drop it off altogether for a better optimized rear wing, this is why it was allowed for use in qualifying in the first place.
Look at the pre DRS-wings, they had much more complicated profiles. A short-chord DRS wing is definitely not the best solution for wing effectiveness. Actuator also costs something in drag and weight.Shrieker wrote:Why would they drop it quali ? Surely, having a DRS wing that you can't use in quali wouldn't cost that much, I mean if you couldn't use DRS in quali you'd still want it in the race. It's a powerfull tool to have, even if it's only for sunday.
That's why it should still be allowed in practice. Surely the teams can gear their cars accordingly to avoid that. Some could opt for shorter gearing and avoid using DRS in the race if they chose to.piast9 wrote:I am afraid that if the DRS was banned in qualifying then the teams would gear the cars in a way that would caused hitting rev limiters during the race immediately after deploying DRS.