diffuser wrote: ↑27 Oct 2023, 14:47
organic wrote: ↑27 Oct 2023, 13:42
xReVo wrote: ↑27 Oct 2023, 08:10
Well actually there is a very long straight in Mexico, which is why they are testing two wings (Monaco and double pillar) because in the race you then risk being like McLaren at Spa.
I actually think they risk being Aston Martin @ Japan.
Mexico with high downforce wings at max speeds of over 350 km/h produce very high loads.
The rb16b RW assembly was continually breaking & cracking when it raced in Mexico in 2021. This happened after the flexible wing TD earlier in the season - the Flexi wing TD would mean that the rear wing flexes less so the maximum load experienced will be higher and may exceed design parameters
AMR are already worried about their RW breaking under load as occured for their medium-high wing at Japan. Perhaps this year's flexible wing TDs could have a similar effect as in 2021, so they are checking that the single pylon is ok to use and if not they have the more structurally sound double pylon from 2022
Remember, after Strolls retirement, they asked Alonso to stay off the curbs. It wasn't a load issue.
Does that explain why they had load sensors mounted to pylon of the RW already on Thursday? If unlucky kerb strike I don't think they'd have extra sensors ready at beginning of weekend
I feel the call to avoid kerbs could easily be precautionary even if they don't know exact cause of stroll's issue. Suzuka kerbs are far from aggressive