I´m afraid I´m the one whos got to appologize, for getting the notion that you had no idea what you were talking about from it.
Yes there are some issues with the idea, but you´ve also got to factor in, that the motor tends to be lighter, that you dont need a clutch, and that you might not even need a gearbox. So there might or might not be a weight advantage, that you can put into more batteries. Lastly there currently is very little money in and put into high performance batteries (there´s the rc niche market but other than that all battery developments are towards cell phones and similar applications) so things might turn quickly if racing teams were to put money in such projects.
Additionally if the rc market is anything to go by, electric motors have already surpassed nitros in many categories of rc and continue to do so.
I have to disagree here. There are of course issues with the ides since the main braking force comes from the front with the driven wheels usually at the rear. But with a race car you´re always either braking or accelerating, so unlike in road traffic there´s a lot less energy spent to just keep the speed against the various resitances you encounter, and much more spent on acceleration which you can feed back during decceleration.
I fail to see the issue with that. If anything this would speed pitstops up a lot if the batteries were to be placed in an easily accessible spot like the sideskirts.
We most certainly won´t, but unless the FIA opens up to the possibility we never will.
Whoops didn´t think of that. That is of course an issue and a big one at that.
The real question here would be if it is faster though. Obviously I don´t have an answer to that one but I can tell you that we will never see a very different car as long as the shape of F1s is regulated to the point that they´re almost part of a spec series.
Plus its not exactly available in large quantities. While I hate the stupid argument that F1 is supposed to have a direct influence on current road car development (it´s not btw) this one would be so far away from even having the slightest chance to ever be employed on the road that I´d be stonrgly against the idea.
I am of course bulding castles in the air here, but the fact remains that by specing F1 more and more the FIA is going to curb all innovations that could be done which also hurts samller F1 teams that always have been the backbone of F1.
If you ask me we need to get back to an F1 that is open to new innovative ideas made by teams which are not afraid to go down a different route that might hurt them in the short run (think renaults turbos) or if they´re lucky drastically change the playing field in their favour over night.
Don´t you mean auto controlled sequentials?
It´s a little weird to romanticise that story, but either way on a more comical note this reminds me of a great comic where Donald comes into the pits and asks for new shoes since his whole undertray including the engine fell off several laps ago and he had been flintstoning it ever since.