This is what I am thinking DK, could it be, hypothetically of course, that Newey could not have it his way with the exhaust and the heat-shield was the result?
A compromise, God forbid?
What about Ferrari F60?DaveKillens wrote:You can't just take a hacksaw and chop off a few offending inches, that just doesn't happen today.
RBR can completely customise their exhaust - within the parameters set by the engine characteristics.xpensive wrote:My humble question was (is) to what extent Red Bull can design the exhaust and how much is decided by Renault?
Sorry, its not great, but I can't think of a more straightforward way of putting it.xpensive wrote:Thanks kilcoo, that was a most credible explanation.
The Shorter wheelbase that Ferrari, McLaren and BMW all opted for provides slightly better agility vs the longer wheel base of RedBull, Renault, Williams and Toyota who have all gone for slightly more high speed stability.xpensive wrote:Given the images above are to scale, which I do not doubt, Ferrari, McLaren and BMW all have considerably shorter wheel-bases than the RB5, what does that mean?
It looks like the cars fall into two design camps in terms of wheel base.imightbewrong wrote:From http://www.pitlanefanatic.com/viewtopic.php?f=39&t=611
The RB5 exhaust is further back and lower
Yeah and the Williams!JiMbO wrote:look at how much shorter the toyota's nose is compared to the ferrari's
Can you please elaborate on this for me? What gains and what losses? Or was it more of a general statment kind of meaning short wheel base is aggressive route and long wheel base is the conservative route?timbo wrote:I think those who opted for short wheelbase tried to maximize gains, and those with longer wheelbase tried to minimize losses.