
1. Since the car is made up of large amounts of resin encased carbon fiber is it not a good electrical conductor?
I really really dunno. May paint conduct electricity?
2. The spinning fly wheel on the KERS system sitting next the magnetic field surrounding the engine and spinning at 19k rpm, will it not itself generate electricity or static electricity?
The fly wheel will spin at 65k rpm and its enclosed in a vacumm chamber that will also prevent it to literaly "explode".
3. Since the engine and the KERS in a formula one car are a structural member of the car, that is the engine is a load bearing member of the car, would not that allow for the electrical current stored in the KERS to be directly transfered to the carbon fiber body of the car?
There may be 2 types of KERS:
1. Electrical energy stored
2. Mechanical energy stored
If our case is No 1, current generated in a electrical moto-generator should be stored in a battery and then backwards when used, to the electrical moto-generator. That should be electrically isolated as a standard electrical motor/coils/battery system is.
4. A guy from NASA last night on TV said that a car is a capacitor traveling on insulators, is this not true?
True, more than once I served as a conductor between a car and the ground. Not a nice surprise, not a big shock anyways.