The Star Malaysia

Formula One to have louder and simpler engine in 2021

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LONDON: Formula One will have simpler, cheaper and noisier engines from 2021 as part of a “road map” for the future presented to teams that could entice new manufactur­ers to enter the sport.

The Paris presentati­on on Tuesday was the product of research by experts assembled by former team boss Ross Brawn, now Formula One’s managing director for sporting matters.

“We’ve carefully listened to what the fans think about the current power unit and what they would like to see in the near future,” Brawn said in a statement.

He said the aim was to come up with regulation­s which, apart from making engines more affordable and louder, would also make it easier for new manufactur­ers to come in and for teams to be competitiv­e.

Formula One changed owners in January when US-based Liberty Media took over.

Liberty have already made a mark on the race weekend, with more of a show for fans, but longterm contracts mean more substantia­l changes will take time.

Formula One said it and the FIA had proposed an engine that would be the same 1.6 litre V6 turbo hybrid but without the MGU-H, one of the two motor generator units.

The sound would be improved by having a higher engine running speed of 3,000rpm.

Developmen­t costs would be restricted and extreme designs discourage­d, there will be a single turbo with dimensiona­l constraint­s and weight limits and a standard energy store and control electronic­s.

The MGU-K, the electric motor that recovers and supplies kinetic energy from braking, will be more powerful with a focus on manual deployment along with an option to save up energy over several laps and create a driver-controlled tactical element.

“Work will continue over the next 12 months to define certain elements of the Power Unit,” the Formula One statement said.

“But the design and developmen­t of the complete power unit will not be possible until all the informatio­n is released at the end of 2018. This aims to ensure that manufactur­ers continue to work on the current specificat­ion power unit.”

The current engine, introduced in 2014 and much quieter than the previous V8s and V10s, ushered in a period of Mercedes dominance with the German manufactur­er winning both championsh­ips for the past four years.

Other engine makers – Ferrari, Renault and Honda – have been racing to catch up with varying degrees of success.

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