6.1.2 All the fuel stored on board the car must be situated between the front face of the engine and the driver's back when viewed in lateral projection. When establishing the front face of the engine, no parts of the fuel, oil, water or electrical systems will be considered.
Furthermore, no fuel can be stored more than 300mm forward of the highest point at which the driver's back makes contact with his seat.
there was one such F1 car, the Tipo 160 Alfa Romeo (tested but not raced, for the 2.5 litre 1954 formula)g-force_addict wrote:Maybe with the driver between the rear tires like 60s front engine drasters?
Do you really think there would be a performance advantage? If so, then I am reasonably confident it would be banned, regardless of the current rules.g-force_addict wrote:Maybe with the driver between the rear tires like 60s front engine drasters?
This cant be serious...g-force_addict wrote:Maybe with the driver between the rear tires like 60s front engine drasters?
not better for 4 wdwesley123 wrote:This cant be serious...g-force_addict wrote:Maybe with the driver between the rear tires like 60s front engine drasters?
Teams back then switched to a engine switched behind the driver because it was better, much better
ever is a long timemzivtins wrote:In my eyes, massive design and performance disadvantage, and thats kind of been proved by every car manufacturer ever![]()
In terms of converting the mechanical energy into kinetic, it is much more efficient having the engine pushing from the back, i'e rearwheel drive. Of course 4wd mixes that up a little lol
How do you figure? And I that were the case why do consumer cars tend to be FWD in a market where efficiency is a big selling point .mzivtins wrote:In my eyes, massive design and performance disadvantage, and thats kind of been proved by every car manufacturer ever![]()
In terms of converting the mechanical energy into kinetic, it is much more efficient having the engine pushing from the back, i'e rearwheel drive. Of course 4wd mixes that up a little lol
I am also curious as to why this would be the case.mzivtins wrote: In terms of converting the mechanical energy into kinetic, it is much more efficient having the engine pushing from the back, i'e rearwheel drive.