So it's back to the future for F1 in 2013. The latest reports are suggesting the current 2.4 litre V8 units will be dumped for 1.5 litre, 4 cylinder, twin turbo engines. Presumably these won't be the 1,000 BHP per litre fire breathings monsters we all knew and loved from the mid 80's but wouldn't it be great to hear a waste gate popping opening again and and to see balls of flame bursting out of the exhaust?
Chances are these will end up being like neutered dogs, with highly restricted boost levels and a fuel economy formula. Even so, Honda managed some very imaginative ideas in the last season for the turbos (involving taking the air from different areas in the car so it was at different tempertures if I remember rightly) so it will give the engineers some new areas to work on. It might even encourage some new engine manufacturers to come forward, the Hart and Zakspeed engines were both quite effective, albeit at a time of unlimited boost.
It will also require the drivers to learn some new skills as keeping the boost pressure up on a turbo requires a different approach compared to normally aspirated engines.
http://en.espnf1.com/f1/motorsport/story/15389.html?CMP=OTC-RSS
Chances are these will end up being like neutered dogs, with highly restricted boost levels and a fuel economy formula. Even so, Honda managed some very imaginative ideas in the last season for the turbos (involving taking the air from different areas in the car so it was at different tempertures if I remember rightly) so it will give the engineers some new areas to work on. It might even encourage some new engine manufacturers to come forward, the Hart and Zakspeed engines were both quite effective, albeit at a time of unlimited boost.
It will also require the drivers to learn some new skills as keeping the boost pressure up on a turbo requires a different approach compared to normally aspirated engines.
http://en.espnf1.com/f1/motorsport/story/15389.html?CMP=OTC-RSS
). Another reason i don't see the power going much higher is because i can also see the FIA bringing the rev limit way down to 12-15k to further increase reliability, decrease costs etc etc etc.
basically negating any variance in engine, so we might as well have one common power unit.... just saved some more money...