Maybe the Alfa Romeo floor is designed to pull more air from above the floor like in Porsche group c cars while the outwash from front of the floor seals the edge of the throat.
Exactly - free of regulations. Mechanical seals are second to none, you turn your flow from 3D to almost 2D and you reduce the "waste" of 3D flow.
This is essentially the function of the floor cutouts as seen on the Alpine & RedBull (and others, probably) last year. Except they featured an exit from the front floor, a carefully shaped ‘winglet’ and an inlet to the rear floor. The winglet serving to create/harness the vortex flow from the outlet; the inlet ‘pulling’ airflow from the upper floor surface.FW17 wrote: ↑09 Feb 2023, 09:31Maybe the Alfa Romeo floor is designed to pull more air from above the floor like in Porsche group c cars while the outwash from front of the floor seals the edge of the throat.
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/imag ... w&usqp=CAU
What Joe Katz described here can indeed be the idea behind it. But a lot will depend on the vector field of the vortex itself if it will assist the underbody flow or not. What i have experienced is a specific ride height must be maintained to make these vortices work as this affects the shape. (their completely new suspension could be in relation to that and an indicator that they are using it). The lower the ride height an elliptical vortex is formed and the vortex actually flattens which actually changes the vector field of the incoming flow of the underbody. Also the diffuser flow is actually very complex as it is 3d in nature and the diffusers now expand in the vertical direction which lowers the suction on the floor. So this vortex has less to do with it now but the new regulations have raised the edges so it will eventually come into play and Alfa may make use of it, which i think would be really awesome.FW17 wrote: ↑09 Feb 2023, 09:31Maybe the Alfa Romeo floor is designed to pull more air from above the floor like in Porsche group c cars while the outwash from front of the floor seals the edge of the throat.
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/imag ... w&usqp=CAU
He did literally say that it was likely a high cooling setup for the tracks with more demand
Power Unit packaging is something Sauber isn't good at compared to the other Ferrari customer Haas. Sauber has never packaged their engine cover as tight as Haas have managed to do.
So that’s why those teams have more engine problems and DNFs?EJ22B wrote: ↑09 Feb 2023, 21:41Power Unit packaging is something Sauber isn't good at compared to the other Ferrari customer Haas. Sauber has never packaged their engine cover as tight as Haas have managed to do.
Similarly, Williams isn't good at packaging the Merc power unit compared to other Merc customers like Mclaren and Aston.
It's probably something to do the restrictions created by their existing facilities and budget.
That Front wingF1Krof wrote: ↑10 Feb 2023, 12:26https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FomTRDHWcAI ... me=900x900
via AMUS -> floor definitely looks different to the renders.