Aero studies. Yes, drag is important.
Crash zones- there are areas on the new cup cars.
Engines- spring materials to keep valve float to a minimum (F1 uses air springs- pointless). Bearings/oiling- realistic sizes for real cars that are capable of high loads.
Materials- better use of steel. So far, nobody has figured out how to make more than a handful of compisite chassis in a day. I think we make more F150's in a day than all of the compisite chassis in a year.
I can tell you with 100% certainty that EFI development goes TOWARD racing and not the other way. Real cars are way more advanced than racing cars. Have you checked a GM lot recently for pushrods? You may find some.
Stop thinking the 1% of the market, and think about the rest of the 99%. Roughly 50% of the market buys vehicles with live axles. Or have you forgotten the truck sales? So having ONE series that uses them seems pretty reasonable to me.
What magic do you get if you go EFI, OHC, and IRS? In the end, it's still cars going around a track, however it's done. Will your preceptions change if all the cars circling Matinsville for 3 hours really have different types of systems on it? And if you go with a composite chaissis, all you really get is a stiff and expensive car. Still going around in circles.
Open wheel racing is pointless, right now, for an OEM. Well, except Ferrari. Fun to watch as a spectator, bad investment for engineering. Hopefully, once you get out in the real world, you'll see that.
And if you REALLY think making them do more road courses will make them more popular- again, go to a Grand Am race. Tell me when Grand Am live is on. Or when 3 hours of Grand Am testing on Friday will be on Speed.
But, hey, if you really like jousting with those windmills, just be careful of Sancho.
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