[Formula 1] F1 agrees to delay engine rules to 2014


Recommended Posts

F1 agrees to delay engine rules to 2014

Formula 1 chiefs have agreed to delay the introduction of new engine regulations until 2014, in a move that will see the sport switch to 1.6-litre V6 turbo engines.

As AUTOSPORT revealed earlier today, F1's manufacturers tabled a proposal at Wednesday's meeting of the Formula 1 Commission to move away from the plans to have four-cylinder turbo engines from 2013.

That four-cylinder concept had divided opinions among the car makers and, after intense efforts between them and the teams, a proposal was put together for V6s to be introduced from 2014 - with them still featuring the 'green' hybrid systems that the FIA is so keen to see.

The manufacturers' proposal received the necessary agreement in the F1 Commission, which is made up of the teams and other representatives from the sport, and it will now go to a fax vote of the FIA's World Motor Sport Council.

With the WMSC having made it clear it was willing to consider a delay to the original 2013 plans if there was a push from the sport's competitors, getting the official sign off is likely to be a formality.

The late effort to find a deal on future engine regulations comes after an intense debate over the past few weeks about a way forward for the sport.

Ferrari was against the idea of four-cylinder engines, while Mercedes-Benz and Cosworth had expressed reservations about the costs involved of developing the new designs.

Only Renault was in favour of the move, and its managing director Jean-Francois Caubet had warned that the future of the French car manufacturer in F1 depended on the engine regulations changing.

"I told Bernie and Jean Todt that today we are in the 'red zone' because we have no idea what will be the future for Renault," he told AUTOSPORT in Canada.

However, keen to help do what was best for the sport, Renault also agreed to the V6 concept that now looks set to be incorporated into the regulations.

Source: Autosport

I find myself divided over this. On the one hand, I want to see "the pinnacle of motorsport" with the fastest cars and the latest technology. I want to see the innnovation from the teams each year as they try and squeeze the best out of their cars. Big engines that are noisy and cars that are fast.

We know how all this eventually filters-down into everyday production cars, so on the other hand I can't help feeling that using engines which are more akin to everyday production cars could be better for the car manufacturers and us, the buying public. Of course, even using V6 engines, some of that knowledge is still going to make it's way into your family saloon, but maybe if F1 did use a more conventional (and greener :rolleyes: ) four-cylinder engine, that technology would arrive sooner and more cheaply.

But would it still be F1? Could that still be classed as "the best" in motorsport?

Thank f**k for that ... you can't beat the sound of the current 2.4 V8s ...... they are amazing...

Well the 3.0 V10s were better for a start, but I get your point that the only way is down for cylinder counts and nothing will sound as good.

I'm glad they've delayed it a year and are seriously considering the V6 option, but it will go down to 4 cylinders eventually.

At least we have the 2.4 V8s until the end of the BBC coverage. By the sounds of it they won't seek to renew it, and when it goes to Sky Sports I'll force myself to lose interest in the sport because I'm not paying extra to watch it. Then they can do whatever they want with the regulations.

Well the 3.0 V10s were better for a start, but I get your point that the only way is down for cylinder counts and nothing will sound as good.

I'm glad they've delayed it a year and are seriously considering the V6 option, but it will go down to 4 cylinders eventually.

At least we have the 2.4 V8s until the end of the BBC coverage. By the sounds of it they won't seek to renew it, and when it goes to Sky Sports I'll force myself to lose interest in the sport because I'm not paying extra to watch it. Then they can do whatever they want with the regulations.

Agreed. The BBC provide a superb coverage..much better than ITV who used to break in between laps for commercials.....

I must say that Martin Brundle is a legend! If the contract does go to Sky Sports, I hope they make an offer for him. I don't really rate the others (especially EJ). Don't know if any others of you have noticed, but Jeremy Clarkson has been around and mentioned over the last few GPs. Wonder if he's in the line-up to provide commentary on the F1 -- that would be fantastic!

Agreed. The BBC provide a superb coverage..much better than ITV who used to break in between laps for commercials.....

I must say that Martin Brundle is a legend! If the contract does go to Sky Sports, I hope they make an offer for him. I don't really rate the others (especially EJ). Don't know if any others of you have noticed, but Jeremy Clarkson has been around and mentioned over the last few GPs. Wonder if he's in the line-up to provide commentary on the F1 -- that would be fantastic!

Clarkson would be a poor commentator. He's never done any form of colour commentating and I think his attention span would mean he would talk crap for most of the race. MB/DC is a brilliant line up, both well informed and collectively have vast racing experience, and can hold an audience when there's nothing going on (like the 2 hour break in the Canada GP). EJ is an odd character and I think you need that in a pundit, having a bunch of guys with the same background, same character and same opinions is boring. The BBC coverage is top rate since they got rid of Legard and it would be criminal if they changed any of it.

It'll stay with BBC for years, FIA said F1 must be free for everyone to watch, with rules out monopoly Sky.

I'm quite glad that there not going to change the engines. I absolutely love F1 but some things they say annoys me. They always push for F1 to be cheaper, so why on earth do they keep changing the rules and possibly the engine, forcing teams to invest in MILLIONS on making new parts, new engines. Just keep the rules as they are noew and lock them for 2 years. The top teams will always be the top teams, so forcing new rules isn't suddently going to make Virgin Racing the top contenders, it'll never happen

I'm quite glad that there not going to change the engines. I absolutely love F1 but some things they say annoys me. They always push for F1 to be cheaper, so why on earth do they keep changing the rules and possibly the engine, forcing teams to invest in MILLIONS on making new parts, new engines. Just keep the rules as they are noew and lock them for 2 years. The top teams will always be the top teams, so forcing new rules isn't suddently going to make Virgin Racing the top contenders, it'll never happen

The engine change isn't mainly a cost saving proposition as far as I understand, it is their push for a more "green" F1. Basically they want to have a environmental friendly and fuel efficient solution and push for technology and evolution that can get transferred down to standard cars too.

Is all good being green, but at some point, you have to stop. Far as I'm concern, engines should be powerful as they are safe and reliable, I think currently we have that. F1 should really be green in the KERs aspect, as in newer ways to regenerate energy and I will leave it at that. If they can have regulations for a greener engine, then go ahead but downsizing on current technology is absolutely pointless, changing for the sake of changing.

Smaller is always more efficient, in both Electronics and Mechanics.

I don't agree with what you are saying about it being change for the sake of change. They have stated their reasons.

I do however lament the change :(

Also, imagine if they can get the same mind boggling performance out of a 6cylinder engine? Imagine getting one of them in your car :p Soon people will be drag racing Prius' (and winning :p).

It's official now:

FIA rubber-stamps new 1.6-litre V6 engine plans to be introduced in 2014

Formula 1 will officially switch to a 1.6-litre V6 engine format from 2014 after proposals finalised by the sport's stakeholders during last weekend's European Grand Prix were rubber-stamped by the FIA's World Motor Sport Council on Wednesday.

According to a statement from the sport's governing body, WMSC members agreed in a fax vote to formalise the new turbo-charged engines, which will feature energy recovery units.

The statement read: "Following a fax vote by its members, the World Motor Sport Council has ratified the engine regulations recently drawn up in consultation with the main stakeholders in Formula One.

"The new power plant will be a V6 1.6 turbo unit with energy recovery systems. This new formula will come into effect as from the start of the 2014 FIA Formula One World Championship season."

F1's teams and the FIA were in deadlock over the engine situation for several weeks until agreement was reached during a Formula 1 Commission meeting prior to the European Grand Prix weekend to delay introducing the regulations by a year to 2014.

The new plans also featured a change in the format from a four cylinder engine to a six cylinder unit - Ferrari having been against the former on marketing grounds. Mercedes and Cosworth had also voiced concerns about development costs. F1 technical chiefs then met in Valencia to give their formal backing to the V6, 1.6-litre plan.

The teams indicated after the Valencia gathering that they would ask for a rise in the proposed rev limit of 12,000rpm to 15,000rpm. It remains unclear whether this was included in the ratified plans. Similarly it is not known whether a request to delay the introduction of new chassis rules set for 2013 - to coincide with the new engine plan - has been successful.

Source: Autosport

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I don't hate the new menus, I am not a fan of the lack of features and how they went live when they clearly are not complete. The menu itself presents much better than the previous - but what's lacking (IMO) is: 1) Any kind of automated manipulation such as: "this goes on the new menu because you use this feature more often on this filetype" "this is rarely used and will fall back to the old menu" 2) Any kind of user manipulation such as: "a UI to add/remove/order items to the new menu"
    • The biggest issue in this version of Win 11 context menu, from usability standpoint, is the movable row with basic commands. Think of a car analogy...if You turn the week left the infotainment screen will move right and vice versa. With how it works now Microsoft made something forbidden in designing in any UI, software or hardware. I can't grasp who were the morons within Microsoft suggesting it was a good idea and gave it a green light.
    • LibreOffice 26.2.4 by Razvan Serea LibreOffice is the free power-packed Open Source personal productivity suite for Windows, Macintosh and Linux, that gives you six feature-rich applications for all your document production and data processing needs: Writer, Calc, Impress, Draw, Math and Base. Support and documentation is free from our large, dedicated community of users, contributors and developers. You, too, can also get involved! Choosing Between LibreOffice Still and LibreOffice Fresh: LibreOffice Still is a good choice if you value stability, a longer support cycle, and a more conservative approach to software updates. It's suitable for businesses and organizations where reliability and compatibility are crucial. LibreOffice Fresh is ideal if you're an enthusiast or an early adopter who wants to stay on the cutting edge of LibreOffice development and is willing to accept more frequent updates and occasional minor issues. Features: Writer is the word processor inside LibreOffice. Use it for everything, from dashing off a quick letter to producing an entire book with tables of contents, embedded illustrations, bibliographies and diagrams. The while-you-type auto-completion, auto-formatting and automatic spelling checking make difficult tasks easy (but are easy to disable if you prefer). Writer is powerful enough to tackle desktop publishing tasks such as creating multi-column newsletters and brochures. The only limit is your imagination. Calc tames your numbers and helps with difficult decisions when you're weighing the alternatives. Analyze your data with Calc and then use it to present your final output. Charts and analysis tools help bring transparency to your conclusions. A fully-integrated help system makes easier work of entering complex formulas. Add data from external databases such as SQL or Oracle, then sort and filter them to produce statistical analyses. Use the graphing functions to display large number of 2D and 3D graphics from 13 categories, including line, area, bar, pie, X-Y, and net - with the dozens of variations available, you're sure to find one that suits your project. Impress is the fastest and easiest way to create effective multimedia presentations. Stunning animation and sensational special effects help you convince your audience. Create presentations that look even more professional than the standard presentations you commonly see at work. Get your collegues' and bosses' attention by creating something a little bit different. Draw lets you build diagrams and sketches from scratch. A picture is worth a thousand words, so why not try something simple with box and line diagrams? Or else go further and easily build dynamic 3D illustrations and special effects. It's as simple or as powerful as you want it to be. Base is the database front-end of the LibreOffice suite. With Base, you can seamlessly integrate into your existing database structures. Based on imported and linked tables and queries from MySQL, PostgreSQL or Microsoft Access and many other data sources, you can build powerful databases containing forms, reports, views and queries. Full integration is possible with the in-built HSQL database. Math is a simple equation editor that lets you lay-out and display your mathematical, chemical, electrical or scientific equations quickly in standard written notation. Even the most-complex calculations can be understandable when displayed correctly. E=mc2. LibreOffice also comes configured with a PDF file creator, meaning you can distribute documents that you're sure can be opened and read by users of almost any computing device or operating system. LibreOffice also comes configured with a PDF file creator, meaning you can distribute documents that you're sure can be opened and read by users of almost any computing device or operating system. Download: LibreOffice 64-bit | LibreOffice 32-bit ~300.0 MB (Open Source) View: LibreOffice Website | Screenshot | Release Notes Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi system 2-pack is 27% off by Ivan Jenic The Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi system is currently $239.99 on Amazon for the 2-pack, down from $329.99. That's 27% off and $90 saved for a solid Wi-Fi solution that covers your entire home (purchase link down below). The 2-pack covers up to 4,000 square feet (372 square meters) and supports 100+ connected devices, which handles the vast majority of home setups without breaking a sweat. Wi-Fi 6E brings access to the 6 GHz band for lower latency across the network, and the 2.5 Gb Ethernet port supports gigabit+ internet plans if your ISP offers them. eero's TrueMesh technology handles traffic routing automatically, so you're not manually managing which devices connect to which node. You set up the entire thing through the eero app, and the entire process takes a few minutes. The system also receives automatic security updates in the background, so once you set it up, you don't have to worry about compatibility issues. If you're covering a larger home or want more nodes, the 3-pack is $329.99 and the 4-pack is $479.98, both at similar discount levels. It's worth mentioning that a newer model exists, which is likely the reason for the discount, but the Pro 6E is still perfectly capable hardware for most homes. Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi system 2-pack - $239.99 | 27% off on Amazon This Amazon deal is US-specific and not available in other regions unless specified. This is a first-party seller link (at the time of article publishing); ensure that you also purchase from a first-party seller link only. If you don't like it or want to look at more options, check out the previous deals that we have covered, OR you can also visit Amazon US deals page. Get Prime (SNAP), Prime Video, Audible Plus or Kindle / Music Unlimited. Free for 30 days. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      I2D earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Dr Jared Dental Studio earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      RG INVESTMENT GROUP earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Very Popular
      The Norwegian Drone Pilot earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Very Popular
      s0nic69 earned a badge
      Very Popular
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      484
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      258
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      84
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      64
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      63
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!