So we frequently have conversations where people say that F1, Indy car, Sports car, NASCAR whatever should have basically no rules beyond safety. People keep pointing out how that can’t work anymore and point at the cautionary tale of the original Can-Am series but many people don’t agree.
In the thread on the accessibility of modern racing I resurrected last week Motomoron posted a link to this podcast which I found so fascinating I think it’s worthy of a new separate thread. Here's the link and BTW I've now started binging on this whole series.
We’ve all heard of Scott Tucker spending a million $$’s to win the D sport championship at the Runoffs in 2012, but the podcast has lots of the juicy details.
First off I don’t’ want to discuss Scott, his legal issues and/or the ethics of his business, let’s keep this to racing. I’d heard about it and thought it was a rich guy buying a win so he could move up the ladder. I hadn’t realized he was already a successful ‘Gentleman racer’ with a Silver license with some legitimate success in other series and this was a side project. When I heard about it before I always thought if I had a million bucks to blow on racing I’d blow it being a small fish in a big pond like racing Indy Lights or Sports cars rather than a big fish in an insignificant pond. Turns out he was both.
But the warning part of this comes from the fact that the D sports rules were basically wide open as it was, and listening to the podcast and some of the figures mentioned by Jeff Braun at the start on what they spent base lining the original car I’d bet it was more like $2 mil than $1mil they spent.
Let’s look at the highlights of what they did in eight months. If you listen and I’ve got some figure wrong sorry, I listened to this three days ago, but I think my point is still valid.
Baseline an existing car on kinematics rigs, shakers, modeling, simulators. No problem, any pro team already has this info.
Run simulator testing on every set up for the base car so they know what they have. Again this is what pro teams do.
Buy two of the best engines from the two best engine suppliers in the series as base line and back up.
Hire an engine guy to go through the rules and design an engine especially for the very loose rules. This is where it starts to get silly. As the rules are so open I think they said they had something like six different basic engine configurations and tested tested tested them. Now this is where completely open riles can be an issue. While F1, Indy engine suppliers and sports cars kind of do this, there are rules in place to stop it getting out of hand. All the single seater series dictate the basic layout of the engine to stop them going totally overboard. IT already costs something like $25m for an F1 engine deal. If it was totally open what would the costs be? $50m, $75m, $100m??? They ended up with a 670cc turbo engine that made 350hp and needed a computer to start and stop it or it would melt if just turned off.
Then then they had 44, yes forty four (I wish it had been 42) computers running CFD on the bodywork for weeks and weeks on end. Again this is what F1 does and you can’t get on the back of the grid for less than $50mil. Imagine if the aero was wide open for IMSA (United sports car) You’d price it out of existence overnight. You can already outspend any team within the confines of the rules, but if there were none the first manufacturer to commit a billion $$’s would kill it overnight.
Then they ran a DOE with the different chassis, suspensions, engines and aero set ups on the simulator for days and days on end until they came up with what they decided was the best set up so they designed and built it.
The net result of what in pro terms was a small cheap project was a car that with a gold pro driver, not Scott, was capable of lowering the lap record in testing (so not official) by over 10 seconds and building a space frame 670cc car that was able to set times that would have put it 2nd on the grid a few hundredths off the time of an LMP2 sports racer and was nudging 200mph in an IMSA race, all to be able to be the first SCCA car to break 2 mins at the track.
Some people hate the guy for what he did. I personally think it was mega cool, but it really shows that open rule books can’t work in modern racing with the computing power and technology available. Just imagine what would happen if for instance LMP2 prototypes had an open rule book just keeping the size, weight and capacity limits in place. How much power could you get out of a 5L V8 these days? 1,000-1,500hp? What about unlimited aero, It would be easy to build a car these days beyond the physical capabilities of a human to drive around corners without blacking out even without a banking. IF you weren’t limited to ‘only’ beating 2 mins, ‘only’ having $2mil and ‘only’ having 8 months to do it in, how the hell much could you spend?
No wonder that pretty much every series except F1 and LMP1 limits either the number of companies who build chassis or go to a spec class. These days with open rules no one could possibly to keep going. You might got a great series for the first couple of races, but as soon as someone had the budget they’d build a car so far beyond anyone else’s budget ability the series would die.
I miss open chassis wars in Indy, F3000, F3, prototype racing etc. as much as the next person, but I just doesn’t see how it’s possible to make it work these days, especially with declining eye balls on motorsport as it is with people simply falling out of love with the concept of automobiles in droves.