bhall II wrote:Think about how much the sport has changed aerodynamically over the last ten years for the sake of solving this thing. Now think about how (in)effective those solutions have proven to be. Why keep doing it?
Because I disagree with the
solutions FIA has been introducing
To me the problem is easy to adress:
1- F1 cars cornering speed is fully dependant on DF
2- DF is fully dependant on air conditions
3- Air behind a car is always turbulent
4- Equal cars will never produce equal downforce when one of them is behind the other
5- The only way to
solve this is they shouldn´t be equal cars -> active aero
The other solution would be getting rid of aero, but if this is a serious debate we should assume that will never happen. Nobody want F1 cars doing 20 seconds slower laptimes so that is not an option
FIA has been trying different solutions, and the only one wich was remotedly effective was DRS, wich is a similar solution, they´re not equal cars anymore. Problem is it does not adress the problem, it only provoke a different unbalance. One car will keep going faster through the corners, and the other one will be faster on the straights. You cause an unbalance to compensate another unbalance. But then you have two differente unbalances wich causes it sometimes is not effective and sometimes it´s too effective, depending on the cars involved
IMO trying to minimize that unbalance (active aero) would be much much better than causing another one (DRS) as it would improve the capacity of drivers to fight with similar cars, and that´s what most people want to see when watching a race instead of artificial overtakes due to DRS where drivers can do nothing to stop his rival and have no responsability
In other words, artificial racing vs real racing