JPBD1990 wrote: ↑16 Feb 2022, 11:08I thought the same of the Alfa. I foresee this being a trend this season
But Alfa is a pushrod setup
JPBD1990 wrote: ↑16 Feb 2022, 11:08I thought the same of the Alfa. I foresee this being a trend this season
The Merc pullrod is placed notoriously higher compared to other cars...
Which teams is the last oneBlackout wrote: ↑16 Feb 2022, 11:14The Merc pullrod is placed notoriously higher compared to other cars...
And AFAIK, Williams is using Merc transmission and casing this year
Merc since 2019 (yellow) vs standard (red):
https://www.formel1.de/news/testbericht ... chte-sichtLatifi describes his experience as follows: "Visibility is definitely worse in some corners. It certainly depends on
what kind of curve you are dealing with, how much you steer and where you are looking. And you will have to get used to it.
But there are definitely moments when you just don't see as well [than in 2021]."
On a track as open as Silverstone, "it was okay," says Albon. "But we'll probably have bigger problems on city circuits like Monaco, Baku, Jeddah."
He explains: "When you're cornering, the wheels and covers block a lot of your field of vision, so you're looking further ahead into the corner.
But on a street circuit you only see the wall there and can't just look around it. That could get tricky."
You also have to change your mind in the duel situation, Albon continues: "It might just be more difficult to see where you are
where the front wing is and where the tires are."
Wow cool! This is why I love this site.Blackout wrote: ↑16 Feb 2022, 13:53It's an interesting theory.
If they put winglets in the top duct like my masterful drawing shows, they can enhance air extraction from the rads and towards the outside, by making them create low pressure across their lower side.
Or simply shape the venetian blinds like winglets. But dunno if it's legal.
https://i.imgur.com/CqiBQKz.jpg
I think wrong direction - that may help cooling flow but will harm the rear wing and diffuser performance.Blackout wrote: ↑16 Feb 2022, 13:53It's an interesting theory.
If they put winglets in the top duct like my masterful drawing shows, they can enhance air extraction from the rads and towards the outside, by making them create low pressure across their lower side.
Or simply shape the venetian blinds like winglets. But dunno if it's legal.
https://i.imgur.com/CqiBQKz.jpg
I think the majority of the flow actually still goes through a heat exchanger. There is likely a small slot that lets some air out from the high pressure area before it enters the heat exchanger, and helps the tight packaging on the outside skin by reenergizing the flow thereBlackout wrote: ↑16 Feb 2022, 13:53It's an interesting theory.
If they put winglets in the top duct like my masterful drawing shows, they can enhance air extraction from the rads and towards the outside, by making them create low pressure across their lower side.
Or simply shape the venetian blinds like winglets. But dunno if it's legal.
https://i.imgur.com/CqiBQKz.jpg