https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/braw ... 1/8248533/
You agree with him ? Personally i agree
F1 cars have been using ground effect continually for the last 40 years or so. It never went away.The return of ground effect to F1 for 2022 means teams will need to run their cars much lower to the ground to maximise the downforce generated by the floor.
Agree, it was hardly visible, and it was nice to see different philosophies with merit.Juzh wrote: ↑17 Feb 2022, 15:07While I agree about high rake looking visually less appealing compared to low rake what he should worry about it bus like lengths cars have evolved into, and the absolutely absurd weight. They capped wheelbase at 3.6m which is basically the same as cars were anyway. They should bring it down to like 3m and lower the weight along with it, but no, lets worry about some silly rake angles.
Also many of the suspension tools that were previously used to great extent are now banned which would probably make fine tuning the high rake concept even harder. All in all it seems extremely unlikely any team will try it this year
I think there may be some clever air-bending out there that can overcome that. Honestly, I'd expect any car with a mid-outwash floor could run a bit of rake.
I drive ambulances for a living, which are based on a long-wheelbase Fiat Ducato panel van.....and have almost the same footprint on the road as a 2022 spec F1 car....Juzh wrote: ↑17 Feb 2022, 15:07While I agree about high rake looking visually less appealing compared to low rake what he should worry about it bus like lengths cars have evolved into, and the absolutely absurd weight. They capped wheelbase at 3.6m which is basically the same as cars were anyway. They should bring it down to like 3m and lower the weight along with it, but no, lets worry about some silly rake angles.
blabla what a sad opinion.They never really looked like a racing car should look.