https://www.formu1a.uno/quando-ferrari- ... uo-motore/
An engine upgrade is on coming for more power to counter redbull
Not quite an engine upgrade. They are saying the engine is still going through reliability testing, and it will finish after the first 5 races. At which point they could introduce the 2nd engine that will fill out the torque curve knowing it's reliable. And in case RedBull, with weight loss, and if Mercedes fixes its problems, they could consider unlocking this potential a bit faster like already in Spain. And lastly that it won't be as significant as when they upgraded the ERS last season.Henri wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 15:15https://www.formu1a.uno/quando-ferrari- ... uo-motore/
An engine upgrade is on coming for more power to counter redbull
He said that only for the electrical bit which can still be updated till September. The main upgrade/tune up in Barcelona will, in his words, be "significant".dialtone wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 15:50Not quite an engine upgrade. They are saying the engine is still going through reliability testing, and it will finish after the first 5 races. At which point they could introduce the 2nd engine that will fill out the torque curve knowing it's reliable. And in case RedBull, with weight loss, and if Mercedes fixes its problems, they could consider unlocking this potential a bit faster like already in Spain. And lastly that it won't be as significant as when they upgraded the ERS last season.Henri wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 15:15https://www.formu1a.uno/quando-ferrari- ... uo-motore/
An engine upgrade is on coming for more power to counter redbull
Fair enough, you are right, I misread the last part of the article.rafeyahmad wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 16:12He said that only for the electrical bit which can still be updated till September. The main upgrade/tune up in Barcelona will, in his words, be "significant".dialtone wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 15:50Not quite an engine upgrade. They are saying the engine is still going through reliability testing, and it will finish after the first 5 races. At which point they could introduce the 2nd engine that will fill out the torque curve knowing it's reliable. And in case RedBull, with weight loss, and if Mercedes fixes its problems, they could consider unlocking this potential a bit faster like already in Spain. And lastly that it won't be as significant as when they upgraded the ERS last season.Henri wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 15:15https://www.formu1a.uno/quando-ferrari- ... uo-motore/
An engine upgrade is on coming for more power to counter redbull
I see your images. I see the Cp on the three different designs. Do you have a force calculation derived from the pressures acting on the surfaces?Vanja #66 wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 08:37I've mentioned this already in a few places, top of the floor and sidepod lift/downforce have nothing to do with substitution of downforce lost due to tunnel stall. If anything, Merc has the most downforce on top, even with launch-spec sidepods.
https://i.ibb.co/TrBZgbV/comp1-top.jpg
and RB18:
https://i.ibb.co/gZX18hm/comp2-rb18-top.jpg
Where Mercedes might be lacking is conditioning the flow to strengthen the floor-sealing vortex with wide sidepods and floor front-end design, requiring them to run the car lower and leaving them more susceptible to aero bounce. But that's not a discussion for this topic.
Vanja66 is the one who presented the CFD models showing the differences in cp on the rear tires.Henri wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 08:55Ferraris concept is better on the rear tyres.. Mercedes is a bad concept on the rear tyres it has more dragVanja #66 wrote: ↑05 Apr 2022, 08:37I've mentioned this already in a few places, top of the floor and sidepod lift/downforce have nothing to do with substitution of downforce lost due to tunnel stall. If anything, Merc has the most downforce on top, even with launch-spec sidepods.
https://i.ibb.co/TrBZgbV/comp1-top.jpg
and RB18:
https://i.ibb.co/gZX18hm/comp2-rb18-top.jpg
Where Mercedes might be lacking is conditioning the flow to strengthen the floor-sealing vortex with wide sidepods and floor front-end design, requiring them to run the car lower and leaving them more susceptible to aero bounce. But that's not a discussion for this topic.
I had the forces calculated, I just posted the images for clear visual aid. Didn't want to share any numbers about forces as those could lead the people to wrong conclusions, especially since everything was done way before Bahrain FP1. There can't be large differences on the top, either the floor or sidepods, the geometry and overall concepts don't allow that. You can't make Cp go over +0.2 on these surfaces, and teams wouldn't want that either, would ruin the flow for rear and beam wings.ringo wrote: ↑06 Apr 2022, 01:33I see your images. I see the Cp on the three different designs. Do you have a force calculation derived from the pressures acting on the surfaces?
Then can you say which is generating more. These drawings are good, but a slight difference in how they are modelled compared to the real thing can lead to very different results.
Just as a brief reminder, I never claimed anything about Ferrari v Red Bull drag, only Ferrari v Mercedes. Merc having the most drag was acknowledged by Toto Wolff after Bahrain Q. Red Bull floor (especially front) and beam wing geometry were clearly something else, even during Barca testing, so it was clear you can't draw any reasonable conclusions about the whole car.
Yes. As for the rest of the post, I think you'll be able to find everything that interests you on the thread itself