Metar wrote:If they change it, it will obviously prove to be a mistake - that's something every idiot will agree with you, as well. But, say the nose works great but, say, the sidepods have some sort of fatal mistake? How the --- can you tell?
And please. "my opinion was that it's rear bodywork was messy and was not optimal for good airflow. Ferrari seemed to agree with me"? I can do that too. "It is my opinion that the 'molten' rear of the Renault sidepods wasn't the best idea, and that it's better to have a tighter package. It is also my opinion that Renault's diffuser isn't the best and should be replaced." I dare you to say Renault (or anybody else) doesn't agree with me, at least on the second point.
I don't like the look of that nose (though I think it's a cool concept), but I can't stand couch-critics and self-proclaimed net-photo aerodynamicists finding correlations between a part they dislike and a car's pace (or lack thereof) and claiming it is the cause. Take one short look at the R29 and you'll see many faults - but are you experienced enough to fix
one of them? The bulky sidepods - perhaps they hide tightly-packaged KERS systems in need of cooling? The nasty wing - perhaps it does produce extra downforce, but isn't yet perfected? (never mind that the Brawn wing is also relatively wide, and even lower than the Renault wing)
"It looks wrong" is as much of an argument as "I find women in Fedora hats attractive" - it can still be a fast car and it can still be an ugly woman.
Like I said, the fastest cars on the grid right now are mostly slim nose cars, not wide-nose cars. Most of the teams this year are running slim-nose cars, only a few teams are running wide-nose cars. So based on your logic, does that mean those running wide noses figured out some breakthrough that the rest of the teams did not? The more likely explanation is that the teams running wide noses may have got it a bit wrong.
I am certainly no aerodynamicist but guys like Adrian Newey, Frank Dernie, Mark Gillan, Nicholas Tombazis are and they helped design cars this year that have slim noses.
Historically and statistically, modern F1 cars with wide noses for the most part have not been extremely successful. There have been a few exceptions, but that's it. Most of the championship-winning cars in F1 in the modern era have had slim noses as opposed to wide noses.
The sidepods are unlikely to be the problem as the curvature of the sidepods on the R29 and undercut allow for efficient and optimal airflow to the rear. The fastest cars on the grid are running similarly-shaped sidepods, so it is unlikely.
This has nothing do with what I dislike or how a part looks aesthetically. My opinions are all based on airflow and efficiency. I really don't care how "ugly" the R29 nose looks, it just doesn't look very efficient in terms of airflow and aerodynamics.
If the bulky rear-end is a problem, and Renault knows it, perhaps they should not have run KERS then, like some other teams. Also if the rumours are true and Renault is struggling because KERS throws off their weight distribution, then it's another reason to maybe not run KERS.