Greetings everyone! I am a prior kart guy with FSAE and a decent amount of street car track day experience under my belt, now an engineering test pilot for a living itching to get back on track…and it looks like Formula F has the best bang for the buck out there, with a rules set that looks stable, decent-sized fields and a good engine in Honda that has been involved for a hot minute now. So, at the risk of being called out for my willful ignorance, I have a few questions for the FF crowd here....
- Chassis
- I am seeing in some race results that some are using chassis as old as the Swift DB-1 from decades back. In all reality, how competitive is an older chassis at any level in the FF community?
- Equipment-wise, aside from spares such as suspension wishbones and other miscellaneous hardware that can break at an event, will I be looking at needing to have a ton of different springs, dampers and other performance parts on hand?
- Parts availability- who are the reputable & reliable suppliers?
- Tires
- I am tracking what tires to use. This said, how many track outings/race events does a set typically last while remaining competitive? I know answers may vary, but I have been reading 3-6 outings/race events; does this sound right?
- Powertrain
- Looking at the current SCCA Regs, it appears that modifications/blueprinting of the Honda L15A7 is out of the question. Is this a true statement…or is there ‘between the lines’ stuff that makes or breaks a truly competitive powerplant?
- Let’s talk gearboxes. I am seeing the Hewland LD-200 and the Mk9. However, I am seeing that both are out of production and are supported by Hewland Classic, but are there any others? Also, can a Formula F run a 5-speed…or is the class restricted to 4-speed? Does anybody run the JL-200, which is in production and considered a replacement for the LD-200?
- Licensing
- I am seeing multiple sites with multiple answers on what training I would need. It is way too early to think Runoffs; at this point, just getting on the track and having some weekend fun at the local/regional level is what I am looking at doing. The last thing I honestly want is either going through a school to find out that I don’t meet prerequisites, or going through a bunch of training that I kind of didn’t need. So, with this said, what do I honestly need…and more importantly, what schools provide it? Can it be done at the club level (it looks like some regions do training events…. what is these good for?)?
- Being a pilot, I know that there is no such thing as “too much training”, but in the aviation world, we have different levels of rating. For example, if someone is just wanting to go from point A to B on a sunny day in a Cessna 172, going all the way through Instrument/Commercial is not required; a Private Pilot program is best for that person, whereas if they wanted to shoot for becoming an airline pilot, the path is different, but clearly defined.
I ask that you all forgive me if any of my questions are off-track or outright ignorant, but I want to get the honest takes from the people actually doing this. If there is anything I have learned as a 21-year military veteran that once held a tactical command, and as an industry professional and business partner nowadays tasked with making critical decisions on a daily basis both in and out of the cockpit, is that information is key to managing risk.
To set expectations, I have not yet committed to this. I am merely researching at this phase, and just like doing fact finding on the internet, I am expecting there to be multiple answers to each of my questions. I know there will be other follow-on questions after this. This said, I am in no rush to begin this venture and although my previous motorsport venture (karts) became very successful, I have zero intention of pulling the trigger on anything until I have the data I need to make the best-informed decisions that I possibly can. I hold nothing but the upmost contempt towards "Gotcha's" and "Oh, By the Way's" that could have been otherwise avoided.
Bottom Line- If I am to do this, I want to do it right and have a load of fun while doing it. I have no interest in doing some kind of minimalist effort (it never ends well), nor do I want to be that guy who ends up getting all the stuff I don't need or will ever use. I think we all know of someone who ignorantly threw a platinum card at the Snap-On guy when all he really needed was at Harbor Freight the whole time, right?
On a separate note, my engineering firm specializes in aerospace composite work, vehicle design, aerodynamics (via CFD) and flight test. This said, given that we are currently developing a 4-place kit-built aircraft, we will soon be in the position to assist the local motorsport community with any kind of composite fabrication & repair. If anyone is genuinely interested in learning “The Art of the Layup”, let us know; we will be happy to teach!
Thanks again, folks. I look forward to hearing from you all!