Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel leads the 2013 Brazilian Grand Prix from Mercedes' Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton and Ferrari's Fernando AlonsoImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel won the 2013 drivers’ championship – the last to feature V8 engines – by 155 points from Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso

Much of the 2013 season was boring. Why such a fondness for the era? I’m intrigued by the demands of the new era and feel it’s consistent and coherent with the current age. Are the critics of the current era flagging their age and risking their obsolescence? – Dave

This question essentially centres on the push by FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem to return Formula 1 to a set of engine regulations that are pretty much the same as the era from 2010-13.

We delved into this topic extensively last week. There’s a link to that article below.

Now, as to the specific question, yes, 2013 was pretty boring, or at least the second half of it was.

The season started relatively competitively – Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel won four of the first 10 grands prix, but Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso, Lotus’ Kimi Raikkonen and Mercedes drivers Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton all won over that period.

But a change to the specification of tyres following a series of blow-outs at the British Grand Prix led to Red Bull dominating and Vettel won the last nine races in a row to clinch a fourth consecutive world title.

The last years of the V8 era, once refuelling was banned at the end of 2009, fluctuated between intensely competitive and, er, not.

The 2010 and 2012 seasons had gripping title fights. In 2010 there were five drivers in the running until the penultimate race, and four mathematically at the last one.

That was the year Ferrari dropped the ball on strategy in Abu Dhabi and threw away the title, letting Red Bull and Vettel in to win their first title.

In 2012, there were seven different winners in the first seven races, and the title fight between Vettel and Alonso went to the final race again.

In 2011, as in 2013, Vettel and Red Bull dominated.

But there were a lot more factors involved in those scenarios than just engines. Tyres, for one. The relative competitiveness of the cars for another.

However, the naturally aspirated era – and especially the years from 1994-2009 when there was refuelling – was notorious for the lack of overtaking on track.

That has certainly increased this year with the new style of “yo-yo racing” brought about by the new hybrid engines.

There are so many issues wrapped up in this engine debate. Some of it may well be people harking back to the past, one they felt was more attractive than what F1 serves up today.

But there is also a cost issue, whether the essence of F1 has been polluted, noise, the changing road-car market place and on and on.

  • Will F1 go back to the future with its engines?

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      4 days ago

With Kimi Antonelli doing especially well lately and a lot of talk about his talent and future, can we put some of his results down to his race engineer Pete Bonnington? We all know how good Lewis Hamilton was working with Bono. – Michael

The relationship with their engineer is one of the most important for a racing driver.

In Peter Bonnington, Antonelli has someone of vast experience, who has “learned from the greats”, as Mercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff put it in Miami.

Bonnington previously had the same role with Michael Schumacher and then Lewis Hamilton. Wolff says: “He has been a good mentor to (Antonelli). But also a strong boss.”

But putting Antonelli with Bonnington is just one example of the care Mercedes have taken with the start of Antonelli’s F1 career.

Wolff has always been convinced of his protege’s potential. He has mentioned over and over again that he knew Antonelli would make mistakes at the start of his career, but that equally he knew he would come good.

And now Antonelli has done exactly that, Wolff is already in the next phase – keeping him grounded and focused on the job, and not getting carried away with things.

Wolff says: “We need to keep re-emphasising and repeating the message. This is a long game. He has a killer of a team-mate (George Russell) that is extremely fast. The others are catching up in performance. And we want to play the long game.”

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How does a driver’s size and weight affect the performance of the vehicle? Is any allowance or compensation made for larger drivers, for example Russell vs Antonelli? – Gil

The F1 rules are constructed in such a way as to minimise any deficit a driver might suffer from their size and weight.

The minimum weight for an F1 car this year is 768kg, and that includes the driver.

The principle behind this is that otherwise lighter drivers would have an advantage over heavier ones, as lower weight is lap time.

Back in the late 1980s and early 1990s, this was the case. So, for example, when Nigel Mansell and Alain Prost were Ferrari team-mates in 1990, the considerably heavier Mansell had to literally drive faster to lap at the same speed as Prost.

As Mansell was mentioned to be more than 20kg heavier than Prost, that in theory put him at a disadvantage of a little over 0.2secs a lap.

Fundamentally, this is now a non-issue, although it does still crop up for taller drivers from time to time when it comes to seating position and trying to get their head low enough not to impede the airflow, especially into the engine air intake.

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