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Thread: 2015 WRC Homologation
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26th June 2013, 12:35 #31
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I think it is very poor by Autosport/Motorsport News to say such a thing about the rules. They should say it as it is, yes some components have to be production parts from any manufacturer. But what they said is clearly wrong.
Nav
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26th June 2013, 18:46 #32
”Regulations state that the car must be built by using production parts with nothing bespoke or tailor-made allowed.”
“The use of production parts doesn’t preclude the use of specialist suppliers such as Sadev for the transmission or AP-Racing for the brakes. But, the parts purchased have to be off-the-shelf – or, in some cases, designed for M-Sport but then put on the shelf and made available for anybody else to buy”.
Bespoke / tailor made or not?
Imo parts that can’t be off-the-shelf are wishbones, sub frames, electric looms etc.
I don’t think there are any control parts in the body shell but instead control materials (roll cage) and control dimensions to convert the body shell for 4WD. The allowed modification to the body shell can be found in the rallycross technical regulations (page 6).
I read an article some time ago (couldn’t find it anymore) that a new turbo can be homologated if it come from a car produced in min. 2500 units.“Don’t eat the yellow snow” Frank Zappa
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28th June 2013, 13:16 #33
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I don't get it.
I think if the specialist suppliers are allowed to make R5 parts, teams are going to buy their expensive parts anyway.
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29th June 2013, 20:43 #34
Even more expensive it would be if the manufacturer or the manufacturer’s team would develop parts like gearboxes and brakes by themselves. It would be like inventing the wheel again. Better with a specialized supplier which have experience about these special parts and can also sell the same parts to other racing vehicles (larger production volume = lower unit price).
The parts from the specialist suppliers must also be approved by FIA (price).“Don’t eat the yellow snow” Frank Zappa
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1st July 2013, 15:06 #35
so any news from rules and regulations for the next couple of years???
Only you know your true potential.
This year we rally #ForCraig
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3rd July 2013, 19:57 #36
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Guess we will have to wait for the FIA to announce a plan of the phasing out of the current WRC/RRC categories next year and R5 to become the top category for 2016?
Maybe the R5 category will be moved to a 34mm restrictor from the current 32mm in order to keep the speeds exactly the same as what the WRC's have now.Nav
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3rd July 2013, 20:24 #37
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It's not that easy. The R5 engines and all parts are closer to production units and with reasonably bigger torque and power with 2 mm larger restrictor (approximately 13% of power more) it could bring serious reliability issues. Another factor is rews. Current R5 are designed for maximum 7500 RPM and I believe Fiesta has it's peak power around 6000 RPM. With same turbo and that larger restrictor the peak power must move a lot higher, I can imagine it can be even 2000 RPM or something. Rews are very serious thing for reliability.
I don't say it's not possible, I just want to say that it would probably lead to a large redesign of many parts (and also growth of price).Stupid is as stupid does. Forrest Gump
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15th August 2013, 17:45 #38
I copied MJW’s comment from the Hyundai thread and continuing here because imo MJW’s comment is also a general comment about the homologations in future.
Originally Posted by MJW
World Rally Championship - News - Wilson: New R5 a big step forward
“The FIA has frozen the price until the end of 2015, so customers know exactly what the costs are going to be.”
Originally Posted by OldF“Don’t eat the yellow snow” Frank Zappa
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15th August 2013, 18:00 #39
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The FIA could easily control the costs of the R5 car. By taking the rules further with production brake calipers (any car manufacturer and homologated of car production of 2500 models at least etc).
There are many other components they could apply this to, like the turbo. As they already have the rule in place for the intercooler and radiator.
Then start to trim things further by production only bodywork, driven wheels as the road car.
So cars like the MINI Countryman can turn up as 4WD and the likes of Hyundai and VW will have to think about making 4WD road cars of their i20 and Polo.
The solution is bringing the rally car closer to the road car, aka GpA style. Allowing parts like brake calipers, sensors, turbo, radiator, intercooler etc from any production road car is a good move.
I guess Porsche brake calipers would be the brake weapon of choice if the rule is applied to the brakes?Nav
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15th August 2013, 18:05 #40
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Originally Posted by navtheace
Quite a head start for Neuville then compared to Tänak regarding next year. Tested the 2025 machine before CER and now this.
Hyundai WRT