the 'current metric' is the effing ruleJust_a_fan wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 14:03They don't comply with the rule, they comply with the current metric - the way that deformation is tested....
the 'current metric' is the effing ruleJust_a_fan wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 14:03They don't comply with the rule, they comply with the current metric - the way that deformation is tested....
You need to be clearer Tom?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 14:58the 'current metric' is the effing ruleJust_a_fan wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 14:03They don't comply with the rule, they comply with the current metric - the way that deformation is tested....
No it effing isn't.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 14:58the 'current metric' is the effing ruleJust_a_fan wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 14:03They don't comply with the rule, they comply with the current metric - the way that deformation is tested....
It is. There is no other quantitative statement which can be used to evaluate what amounts to flexing and what does not. The rule "part X must be inflexible" is literaly unenforcable - there must be a quantitative threshold, otherwise engineers just have to guess (or mind-read) what the FIA deems flexing and what not, and you can't run a technical competition where teams need to engineer at the boundary of what is permissable to win if those boundaries are not absolutely clear. The huge recurrent mistake of the FIA is that they provide no quantitative measures that are universal and indepedent of the testing metrics. With that, the metrics are the only quantitative thing engineers can go by - but they leave room for ambiguity outside of what those metrics quantify.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑25 Jul 2022, 12:49No it effing isn't.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 14:58the 'current metric' is the effing ruleJust_a_fan wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 14:03They don't comply with the rule, they comply with the current metric - the way that deformation is tested....
@J_a_F, I've seen the sections of the regulations that define the metric quoted in this thread but I don't think I've seen any other sections that effectively say that the plank as a whole must not flex - which is not to say there aren't any such sections, just I've not come across them (I've not gone looking either). I'm assuming that you have such other sections in mind - can you quote/identify those sections so I can better understand your view point.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑25 Jul 2022, 12:49No it effing isn't.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 14:58the 'current metric' is the effing ruleJust_a_fan wrote: ↑24 Jul 2022, 14:03They don't comply with the rule, they comply with the current metric - the way that deformation is tested....
https://racingnews365.com/f1-teams-agre ... -amendmentWith several F1 teams having suffered with bouncing so far in 2022, a compromise agreement has been reached with the FIA to raise the cars' floor edges by 15mm.
Personally I don't think they should have changed anything. Toto Wolff has announced that they've solved their oscillation problems, and it's something that every team would iron out eventually ...JordanMugen wrote: ↑09 Aug 2022, 20:34It seems FIA have decided on 15mm increase in floor edges for 2023 and no changes to diffuser throat height:
https://racingnews365.com/f1-teams-agre ... -amendmentWith several F1 teams having suffered with bouncing so far in 2022, a compromise agreement has been reached with the FIA to raise the cars' floor edges by 15mm.
This does seem like a more measured approach than the 25mm change originally proposed.
Presumably there will also be stricter floor edge deflection limits, to reduce the incentive to make floppy floors that bend down to seal this 15mm gap?
Yes because 15mm is a modest tweak and 25mm is a gargantuan, earth-shattering change...JordanMugen wrote: ↑09 Aug 2022, 20:34This does seem like a more measured approach than the 25mm change originally proposed.
It wasn’t just the 25mm height change tho, they proposed changing the diffuser throat too which would have been a massive combined change.mzso wrote: ↑10 Aug 2022, 10:20Yes because 15mm is a modest tweak and 25mm is a gargantuan earth shattering change...JordanMugen wrote: ↑09 Aug 2022, 20:34This does seem like a more measured approach than the 25mm change originally proposed.
Wolff and Horner comments are best regarded as white noise. They have the same amount of useful information.Holm86 wrote: ↑10 Aug 2022, 00:26Personally I don't think they should have changed anything. Toto Wolff has announced that they've solved their oscillation problems, and it's something that every team would iron out eventually ...JordanMugen wrote: ↑09 Aug 2022, 20:34It seems FIA have decided on 15mm increase in floor edges for 2023 and no changes to diffuser throat height:
https://racingnews365.com/f1-teams-agre ... -amendmentWith several F1 teams having suffered with bouncing so far in 2022, a compromise agreement has been reached with the FIA to raise the cars' floor edges by 15mm.
This does seem like a more measured approach than the 25mm change originally proposed.
Presumably there will also be stricter floor edge deflection limits, to reduce the incentive to make floppy floors that bend down to seal this 15mm gap?
Wouldn't they need to do that anyway with the sidewalls going up? One would think keeping it low would push air out the side, with the wall going up. With accompanying loss of downforce and probably nasty turbulence.
Good question, I’ll leave that for the resident aero chaps to answer.
The cars has been bouncing on the floor for as long as I remember, not just this year, the difference is the amplitude. Which seems to be ironed out by the end of the season anywaymzso wrote: ↑10 Aug 2022, 10:27Wolff and Horner comments are best regarded as white noise. They have the same amount of useful information.Holm86 wrote: ↑10 Aug 2022, 00:26Personally I don't think they should have changed anything. Toto Wolff has announced that they've solved their oscillation problems, and it's something that every team would iron out eventually ...JordanMugen wrote: ↑09 Aug 2022, 20:34It seems FIA have decided on 15mm increase in floor edges for 2023 and no changes to diffuser throat height:
https://racingnews365.com/f1-teams-agre ... -amendment
This does seem like a more measured approach than the 25mm change originally proposed.
Presumably there will also be stricter floor edge deflection limits, to reduce the incentive to make floppy floors that bend down to seal this 15mm gap?
But the facts are that you still see and/or hear bouncing on the on-board footage all the time. It makes sense to make a safety margin.
And it will likewise amusing if Red Bull drop back with the new rules. Horner's been churning out phony appeals whilst all the time saying "it won't affect us".