Gecko wrote:feni_remmen wrote: Unless I have it all wrong, Williams holes (for example) are ahead of the axle line and use the rear leg of the lower wishbone to hide the sprung part of the car above it. The placement of the wishbone lets them use the hole
See, this is what puzzles me about the whole ICA case and the actual designs of these diffusers.
Apparently the debate is indeed about the holes ahead of the rear wheel centerline. If the solution was such as was suggested earlier in this thread, namely exactly at the rear wheel centerline, then most of the debate would have been unnecessary.
However, the debate centers on the transition between the reference and step planes, and that applies only to surfaces ahead of the rear wheel centerline (and not necessarily directly on it).
I'm puzzled by all this too
reading the reasons behind the decision, it seems like the holes are indeed ahead of what I thought, somewhere in the transition between the reference plane and the step plane
I thought that transition was pretty tightly regulated, even maximum radii are set!
in any case, the second sentence of 3.12.3 seems to be the loophole exploited:
3.12.3 The surface lying on the reference plane must be joined around its periphery to the surfaces lying on the step plane by a vertical transition. If there is no surface visible on the step plane vertically above any point around the periphery of the reference plane, this transition is not necessary.
the diffuser teams' defence there is the following:
45. The Contested Design Teams submit that they have shaped the step and reference planes to prevent them from overlapping at various points, so that vertically above these points on the reference plane, the step plane is not visible. As there is no surface visible on the step plane vertically above the periphery of the reference plane at these points, the transition is not necessary and has not been placed. There continue to be transitions joining the points where the step and reference planes overlap.
46. Thus, rather than having just one continuous transition, the Contested Design Concept involves the use of multiple vertical transitions between which air may pass (rather than a single continuous transition through which air may not pass). The spaces between these multiple vertical transitions allow air to be channeled towards an additional diffuser which is not visible from directly beneath the car (as it is placed above the visible lower diffuser).
47. The Contested Design Teams argue that there is no provision of the TR which prevents them from shaping the step and reference planes (provided each surface remains continuous), including by having 'cut-aways’ upon the peripheries of these surfaces. They point to examples of the cut-away or shaping used by all teams at the periphery of the step plane to accommodate the rear tires.
I don't get it, I thought all parts of the car visible from beneath it had to be either referenceplane/stepplane or tyres/suspensions/noseandfrontwing/etc