zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Racing
/
Three Things That Could Make People Give A Shit About Formula E
Three Things That Could Make People Give A Shit About Formula E-July 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:11:29

Formula E is a recent addition to the world’s motorsports scene, an electric counterpart to the gas-guzzling established series. It does a lot right, but still nobody really seems to know what it is, what’s it’s up to, or why it’s important. Here are three things the series could do to right itself and no, they’re not gonna be cheap.

Formula E, as I said, does a lot right. , as all of the hardware is uniform across all the teams. The physical chassis, even, is identical, so if, say, Jaguar wants to buy in to the series, they can be competitive from day one. It’s a great incentive.

And . Rather than compete in faraway circuits that are, by regulation, far away from neighbors complaining about noise and traffic and parking, Formula E runs on street circuits everywhere from Hong Kong to Berlin. It’s accessible.

Best of all, . After all, they’re an eco-friendly series. Any casual observer takes one look at Formula E and gets the same excited thoughts. They run electric cars! That’s the future! It’s the future, but now! I bet what Formula E is doing is great!

But the moment they actually sit down to watch the series, the whole thing falls apart, particularly when they see drivers run out of electricity and, rather than recharge or swap batteries or whatever, they .

We've already established that the way Formula E is dealing with battery life kinda sucks, and now…

As , the whole scene is set up for good racing, but the lack of tech makes the event feel hollow. Nobody’s sticking around for it. Once you realize that Formula E isn’t doing anything to advance electric car technology, you realize that it’s basically a bunch of people racing around city centers in glorified golf carts. At a fundamental level, it’s boring. And that’s leaving out that these cars are slower than a Formula 1 car of 23 years ago, as shown by .

So! Formula E is good at drawing in new fans and new competitors, but it’s bad at keeping them. I propose three expensive solutions, which I imagine Formula E probably looked into but decided against due to cost:

1. Swap The Damn Batteries

I’ve talked about this before, but having non-swappable batteries that can’t be recharged during the race is insane. Formula E has a real opportunity here to lead the technological development of fast charging, or the physical requirements of battery swapping, or the development of battery technology to last the entire duration of the race.

As Formula E stands now, teams are required to do a mid-race swap of the entire car, which is ridiculous, because it has nothing to do with the real world. Nobody is going to drive their Tesla halfway to work, then run out of batteries, and then swap into their second Tesla to finish the ride. It’s madness.

2. De-Restrict The Batteries Altogether

Knowing that there isn’t even a single team busily working on some sort of solid state battery, or experimenting with a kind of rare earth metal I have never heard of, genuinely clouds my entire view of Formula E. Knowing that these teams are just parading around technology that major auto manufacturers and research groups are working hard to replace bums me out.

If Formula E is so special, they should be leading the way forward. They could be a technology incubator, not just a showcase. That’s the classic point of racing cars in the first place, beyond just watching a bunch of rich people drive around in circles for a while.

3. De-Restrict The Cars’ Design Entirely

Again, it makes sense for all of these teams to share a common chassis and so on to help draw in new manufacturers and keep the racing close. Here’s the thing:

Nobody cares.

Jaguar might feel good about itself for joining an electric racing series, but knowing that it’s just a Jaguar badge slapped on a uniform car defeats the whole purpose. Would one team run a car that’s just one of those big solar teardrops that made the news in the 1990s? Would one team enter a gigantic battery with a seat on top of it? Would another team build a car that could be wirelessly charged by an overhead network of drones?

Who knows! But it’d be awesome.

So, if these ideas are so great, why hasn’t Formula E tried them out itself? I’m just some shithead blogger, what do I know that the professionals don’t?

Well, there are some real drawbacks with each of these proposals. The first one, allowing battery swapping, adds cost and complexity to the cars. The second one adds even more cost and complexity, and it increases the odds that one team would figure out a right way to do things while other teams spent time and money chasing technological dead ends. That would mean you could have a racing series where only one team won every single race, weekend after weekend. You see this happen in Formula One every so often. Mercedes, for instance, bet big on a particular layout for the series’ new turbocharged engines and Mercedes turned out to be right,and they’ve completely dominated the series for the past few years because of it.

But has F1 lost any fans over it? I doubt it. It’s cool to see technology progress, and someday soon we may see some of Mercedes’ winning technology filter down into production car design. That’s what everyone wants.

My third proposal only aggravates these problems, adding much more cost for each teams as they spend to develop their own solutions, many of which will be inferior to some other, luckier team’s lab work. But that’s the point of a tech incubator. It’s expensive, but it’s good for society and it in itself is interesting to watch.

Formula E is currently concerned with being a series that promotes good wheel to wheel racing, with parity between cars and drivers supported on social media. But the world doesn’t need another pointless racing series, particularly one playing around with socially important electric vehicle tech. What the world needs is a fun, exciting tech incubator, and that’s what Formula E can be, if it’s bold enough to do it.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Racing
This Is What the 2020 Vietnam Grand Prix Could Look Like
This Is What the 2020 Vietnam Grand Prix Could Look Like
In 2020, which is somehow next year instead of the date typed on a screen in an apocalyptic movie, Formula One plans to have a new street race in Vietnam’s capital city of Hanoi—if those plans don’t wither away, as they’re . Either way, F1 is already simulating what the...
Jul 7, 2026
The Entire W Series Female Racing Championship Season Will Air Live in the UK
The Entire W Series Female Racing Championship Season Will Air Live in the UK
The , a women only racing series that launches its inaugural season in May, will do so live on British television thanks to a deal with former Formula One broadcaster Channel 4. The UK was its first announcement of TV coverage, but the series said it’s working on deals...
Jul 7, 2026
Heidi Hetzer, Racer Who Circumnavigated the Globe in a 1930 Hudson at Age 74, Dies
Heidi Hetzer, Racer Who Circumnavigated the Globe in a 1930 Hudson at Age 74, Dies
When Heidi Hetzer hit her 70s, she decided she would do something different. She was going to drive around the world in her 1930 Hudson—and she was going to do it all by herself if she had to. Five years later, Hetzer has died at home in Berlin. Hetzer...
Jul 7, 2026
This Might Just Be the Coolest Livery of the 2019 Indy 500
This Might Just Be the Coolest Livery of the 2019 Indy 500
While plenty of teams and drivers have yet to reveal the cars they’ll be running in this year’s , I’m pretty confident when I say that Andretti Autosport has already blown all its competitors out of the water. Livery-wise, that is. Today, the team has revealed the car that...
Jul 7, 2026
Virgin Racing's Formula E Team Will Be Sponsored By, Uh, Harley-Davidson
Virgin Racing's Formula E Team Will Be Sponsored By, Uh, Harley-Davidson
In what may be one of the most initially confusing news items you’ll read today, is partnering with the Envision Virgin Racing team. A motorcycle brand sponsoring electric open-wheel racing? Yes, you’re reading that right. It’s perplexing, but might make more sense than you initially think. Later this year,...
Jul 7, 2026
Spec BMW E30 Racer Replaces Broken Shifter With a Rubber Mallet, Wins
Spec BMW E30 Racer Replaces Broken Shifter With a Rubber Mallet, Wins
When spec BMW E30 racer Corey Smith’s shifter broke during a recent race in Florida and left a two-inch nub in its place, he just kept driving until he crossed the finish line and got a break before the next race. But even that wasn’t enough time to totally...
Jul 7, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved