I think they should go the other way round. The ICE is "old tech" and in the next decade it's importance will reduce in normal day cars. The new frontier will be battery and recovery tech. F1 could be a fantastic platform, not only to promote but also the develop and test new technology. It will also open f1 up, next to the current manufacturers (who have to go hybrid/full electric in coming years) to battery companies out of China, Sony, Samsung, Apple and Tesla. A possibility would be to disconnect the ICE and ES/CE (and open up the car market for those companies). The next "hot hatch" could be the "Renault-Samsung" instead of the "Honda-Mugen".ME4ME wrote:I fully agree with this. I think F1 should, and probably will, continue on the path of ever improving efficiency. The 2021 regulations should in my opinion take the current regulations to the next level, while taking note of the lessons learning in the V6 era.Cold Fussion wrote:I think it would be interesting to have a very open engine regulations with the rules being a power limit, race fuel allowance and mandated RWD (with front axle harvesting if they wish).
I'd like to see standardized MGU -H and -K, as well as battery units provided by the FIA and it's supplier of choice, in order to reduce costs on that front. By the time the new power units are introduced, MGU design will surely have matured to the point were development has stalled. Also battery technology is not something F1 manufacturers can do much about. Going for standardized parts will ensure economically affordable units.
On the engine side, as you said, there only need to be fuel flow and allowance limits, and what I'd also like to see is a reduced minimum weight for the whole PU as a package. Other than that, I'd like to see the PU regulations fully opened up. Let the manufacturers build whatever engine they deem fit for the fuel they're allowed to use. My problem with the current regulations is that although the PU's are very efficient, they could yet be much more efficient if the manufactures weren't limited by engine regulations.
For the fans sake, I'd like to see the FIA force the manufacturers to publicly specify PU basic properties such as displacement, number of cylinders etc. Also they should incorporate instantaneous power/torque measurements into the units and/or drivetrain and integrate them in the FOM live footage. There should no longer be secrecy over an engines capability.
If the ICE/TC would be more standardised (so it could be made by small engine manufacturers like Cosworth again) and the electrical components are more or less free, with some power restrictions, you would buy not power but weight. But it would be a lot cheaper to run a team within the 107% rule (by not saving 20kg and saving millions in the process)