I don't really understand this mindset. If f1 stopped using ERS you would stop watching? The ERS is the only thing you like about F1? This a complete mystery to me. There are people who probably would rather die than see F1 go full electric and then there are people who would not watch it unless the cars carry heavy batteries and electric motors around the track.hurril wrote:Which leads to cars without any ERS system because just lug around more fuel and skip the conversion inefficiencies. Nobody cares but I would stop watching. It would relegate F1 to things like drag racing in mud and truck hill climbs. Both awesome shows of power but really nothing at all that interesting.Ozan wrote:I would love to see an engine formula which is:
- 2.4 litre v8 twin turbo
- unlimited energy recovery
- unlimited fuel flow
- refueling formula is back
- no restrictions on engine development
I'd much rather see an engine package being chosen that is actually the fastest way around the track. That today and for the next 5 years is turbo petrol engine. Adding any kind of harvesting just adds weight which the system in itself can't compensate with its positives. According to racecarengineering 2013 (the engine special issue) these facts were stated:
V8 weight: 100kg (95 without theMGU). With ancillaries 120kg.
V6 turbo+electrical parts weight: 180kg. With ancillaries: 200kg. 145kg for the ice alone. + the additional cooling.
There is no doubt that a little bigger petrol turbo engine (1,8 or 2 litres) with higher fuel flow limit to get similar peak power as the current peak would run around the current ERS cars. Increase weight to 160kg and take 40kg more fuel onboard and stay at the same weight. Cheaper, faster and would sound better too. More physical to drive and full power available at all times and not when the computer thinks you are permitted to have it.
Why is it worth it to be at the cutting edge of technology if it makes you slower? What is it about the ERS that makes it so important to you? The way I look at it it doesn't add anything positive to f1. It does make the sport look deceivingly developed but when you look at the numbers you'll only find nobody would use it unless it was forced. Yet for some people it is so important aspect of f1 that they'd rather not watch it if it was removed...