It will fun to watch the balance shift forward as the race goes on
Certainly! At the beginning the banger doesn't come around any corner and in the end you drift out of every one.FW17 wrote: ↑12 Jan 2024, 09:34
It will fun to watch the balance shift forward as the race goes on
FW17 wrote: ↑12 Jan 2024, 08:40Why the insistence on putting the battery pack below the fuel tank? is it the safest place for it to be?
Why not put it below the drivers feet?
https://bioage.typepad.com/.a/6a00d8341 ... 970b-600wi
https://www.racecar-engineering.com/wp- ... ra109d.jpg
https://www.artcurial.com/sites/default ... k=jNt2sB7I
Let's not forget safety issue as well, imagine battery getting smashed and catching fire in a crash... They don't call it survival cell for nothing
RA109 passed the FIA crash test with the battery under the monocoqueVanja #66 wrote: ↑12 Jan 2024, 17:19FW17 wrote: ↑12 Jan 2024, 08:40Why the insistence on putting the battery pack below the fuel tank? is it the safest place for it to be?
Why not put it below the drivers feet?
https://bioage.typepad.com/.a/6a00d8341 ... 970b-600wi
https://www.racecar-engineering.com/wp- ... ra109d.jpg
https://www.artcurial.com/sites/default ... k=jNt2sB7ILet's not forget safety issue as well, imagine battery getting smashed and catching fire in a crash... They don't call it survival cell for nothing
15 years ago safety requirements were very different, weren't they? Even Formula Student/SAE requires the battery to be completely within the chassis and installed safely and securely.
If there is a desire to shorten the wheel base, this is one of them. The other would be to remove the turbocharger out of the gear casing, a twin charger for each bank or turbo placed on top of the gear box
Can't see it shortening the wheelbase at all - esp when you read the 26 reg about mgu-k placement. The turbo thing might help. IF the wheelbase limit was 400mm shorter then teams would have to make wider/taller fuel cells and a shorter gearbox case. It's achievable. There just has to be a will from the FIA to lay down the law, which given the state of F1 atm might not be wise politically.
Kind of ruined the ending I was leading to
I remember people comparing those cars to limos. The FIA are also only talking 30-50kg reduction, not reversing the 100kg of bloat since 2014. It still wont make the cars "lively". The AMuS render also seems to show much wider floor/bodywork between the wheels, so there's not really any volume of carbon lost.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑12 Jan 2024, 22:06Kind of ruined the ending I was leading to
As for the wheelbase, the way I understand the FIA and FOM is them wanting to stop and go slightly back on the weight limit first and foremost. Smaller cars are a must for that, which is why they are resucing the WB and tracks. I'm not sure they are too bothered with car dimensions right now.
Even if floors are generating more downforce than ever now, the wings are failry handicaped by design with these rules, and it doesn't look like it will get better with 26 rules, the cars will basically go back to 2016 levels of performance. W06 from 2015 had a 100mm longer WB than 2026 proposal and I don't remember people complaining about those cars already being boats.
Unfortunately, I also don't expext these cars to be noticably more agile in slow corners and chicanes. The stiff suspension will still be there, and that won't help in low speed sections.Having 50 kilos less and slightly smaller WB doesn't feel like being able to get those cars back to pre-hybrid agility.jjn9128 wrote: ↑12 Jan 2024, 22:15I remember people comparing those cars to limos. The FIA are also only talking 30-50kg reduction, not reversing the 100kg of bloat since 2014. It still wont make the cars "lively". The AMuS render also seems to show much wider floor/bodywork between the wheels, so there's not really any volume of carbon lost.
jjn9128 wrote: ↑12 Jan 2024, 22:15
I remember people comparing those cars to limos. The FIA are also only talking 30-50kg reduction, not reversing the 100kg of bloat since 2014. It still wont make the cars "lively". The AMuS render also seems to show much wider floor/bodywork between the wheels, so there's not really any volume of carbon lost.
I think a subset of people have disliked the growing weight and length of cars for 20 years+. I remember complaining that the 2003 cars were too long...FW17 wrote: ↑13 Jan 2024, 04:24http://i1193.photobucket.com/albums/aa3 ... rsq482.jpgjjn9128 wrote: ↑12 Jan 2024, 22:15
I remember people comparing those cars to limos. The FIA are also only talking 30-50kg reduction, not reversing the 100kg of bloat since 2014. It still wont make the cars "lively". The AMuS render also seems to show much wider floor/bodywork between the wheels, so there's not really any volume of carbon lost.
http://i1267.photobucket.com/albums/jj5 ... tczwzg.jpg
I agree with the sentiment. They should go for a good formula and not workarounds on workarounds.organic wrote: ↑08 Jan 2024, 13:17Pierre Waché on the new cars/2026 regs
The speed is going down and the feeling is not so nice. The FIA works with the teams on how this energy will be deployed to make it less annoying for the driver and to have a better speed profile throughout the lap.Plus, they also work on the car characteristics to have less drag and less downforce. By having less downforce, you recover more energy because you spend more time in the corners and in the braking zones, and then you spend less time on straights.You cannot put patch on patch on patch to achieve something. You have to look at the problem with a bigger view and say, ‘How do I sort this out and how do I solve my problem? What car characteristic do I need to achieve something?’
If you need a patch to solve some things, you can still do that afterwards. But you don’t start with a patch first. Otherwise, it never works.
Hard? For RB? They consistently deliver one of the best cars at least. They were also in on developing the electric parts.
Or make recovery unlimited and keep the deployment power. That would definitely create a drive for better efficiency.wuzak wrote: ↑09 Jan 2024, 04:04My personal opinion is that they would be better served by upping the ICE power by ~100hp (increase the energy flow rate by 25%), leaving recovery at 350kW but restricting deployment to 150kW.
And then you could reduce the fuel allowance for the race.
It would be nice if all these simulations were made public so we can see what we are getting.