allan wrote:using hydrogen cells is much more effecient and beneficial....
renault were the first to start experimenting with these kinda systems from the early 80s (were engines where turned off when the car comes to a complete stop, then started again when the gas pedal is pressed), and new Japanese hybrid cars already use electric cells/motors up to 40-60 km, but the point is KERS benefits are not worth the vast amount of money that was spent on it this year... say each of the top teams spent 50 mills, you have ferrari, mclaren, bmw, toyota,renault, williams, and "Honda" each developing their own system, thats 300-350 mils being spent on .3 second a lap! isnt that the budget needed to run an additional f1 team? and who was talking about cutting costs?
Each team has spent 10 times that amount developing their own engines and gearboxes but yet Ferrari is the team most opposed to standard powertrains... very hypocritical. Just because Ferrari does not have to think about gas milage or C.A.F.E. doesnt mean that all the other car manufacturers in F1 dont.
KERS is already in use in many different automotive applications as well as trains and even buses. The fact that F1 has higher speeds do not mean the KERS technology is not relevent. momentum is momentum, whether is comes from speed or mass... road cars may not travel as fast as F1 machines but they are much heavier so yes they would all beneifit from KERS. Basically all the teams are using a battery & an electric motor/generator, yes they may be controlled differently but the concept is the same. Tell me in what way is F1 aero related to road cars? or their engines? or gearboxes? KERS may in fact be most related to road cars in that the electric motor/generator is only about 80hp, something a small car may use.
Areo, engines & gearboxes have all seperatly cost more than KERS... where is the outrage towards those.
And no hydrogen cells are not more efficient because KERS is recovering energy that has already been spent(the fuel). Free energy, in a semse.