One of the worst pieces of motoring related journalism ive had the misfortune to read

Caporegime
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2010/04/what_f1s_future_means_for_the.html

The whole article is a farce. Comments

This one made me laugh

All very appealing in its own right, but F1's involvement is key here, for it will help the road-car manufacturers popularise the new technology, making it more acceptable and attractive - in much the same way as semi-automatic gearboxes, pioneered in F1, are now increasingly common and desirable in road cars.

Missed the Subaru / Mitsubishi turbocharged phenomenon did we ?
 
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And forgot about how having turbo power seems to add plenty to insurance costs compared to NA power in some cases
 
All very appealing in its own right, but F1's involvement is key here, for it will help the road-car manufacturers popularise the new technology, making it more acceptable and attractive

Erm what... the BBC speak of this turbocharging as something thats never been done before in road cars, or thats my take on it!
 
Energy recovery systems like KERS is the new technology being talked about.

The article really isn't that bad.

It will be interesting to see how much horsepower they can reliably extract from a 4-pot 1.8L with turbos. And then how much performance they can put on top of that using KERS.

Have to remember that the KERS we saw in 2009 was severely limited. The FIA capped it to 6 seconds per lap, which is silly. If they remove that cap (or increase it A LOT) then it will be great for the sport and innovation.

These are the sort of regulations that will tempt auto-makers back into F1. I can see VAG wanting a piece of this action for example.
 
YAY! Turbos!

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Anyway, I think they were trying to make a point about KERS type systems in road cars but it sounds like they're banging on about turbos. The point is that we're going to see a lot more low pressure FI cars with smaller engines in cars that would normally have a 2.0l+ NA engine.
 
What I find ironic about this all, is that manufacturers have been moving to smaller, yet turbo charged engines for a while now.

Corsa VXR, Mini, 1.4 TFSI VAG motors to name a few, but I guess as someone already suggested, this started with Imprezas and Evos.

Cars are already in development with a similar energy regeneration and electric motor system, the MK3 RS is supposed to be a 4 Pot, 2L up front, with the rear wheels driven by an electric motor.
 
What I find ironic about this all, is that manufacturers have been moving to smaller, yet turbo charged engines for a while now.

Corsa VXR, Mini, 1.4 TFSI VAG motors to name a few, but I guess as someone already suggested, this started with Imprezas and Evos.

Cars are already in development with a similar energy regeneration and electric motor system, the MK3 RS is supposed to be a 4 Pot, 2L up front, with the rear wheels driven by an electric motor.

It started with Group B rally


What's so funny? Both are similar weight and similar power
 
The fact is F1 is the public face of motorsport, most of the technologies we see in F1 were actually used in other forumulas many years before.
 
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