Congrats. Welcome the fourth eye club.
Congrats. Welcome the fourth eye club.
What I mean is, shape the floor like the McLaren, then snake the inlet nozzles through there by making the floor section thicker, or roughly point them in that direction if the floor can't be made thick enough,AR3-GP wrote: β13 Mar 2022, 08:26I think the T-tray inlet is illegal or could only be used to cool electronics. The second example with the floor leading edge is also illegal because the sidepod aperture must be within the regulation box which is behind the floor leading edge. Very interesting ideas though. With your t-tray inlet you could get a true sidepod less car if you reshape the chassis to submerge the radiators inside it.
https://www.racecar-engineering.com/wp- ... re-221.png
viewtopic.php?p=1041474#p1041474
I think there is room within the regulatory boxes to have a floor like the McLaren that βfeedsβ directly to the cooling inlets - for a true faux-pods design. Going to check the regs to see what it says about cooling only locations.vorticism wrote: β21 Mar 2022, 18:29What I mean is, shape the floor like the McLaren, then snake the inlet nozzles through there by making the floor section thicker, or roughly point them in that direction if the floor can't be made thick enough,AR3-GP wrote: β13 Mar 2022, 08:26I think the T-tray inlet is illegal or could only be used to cool electronics. The second example with the floor leading edge is also illegal because the sidepod aperture must be within the regulation box which is behind the floor leading edge. Very interesting ideas though. With your t-tray inlet you could get a true sidepod less car if you reshape the chassis to submerge the radiators inside it.
https://www.racecar-engineering.com/wp- ... re-221.png
I'm afraid I have to upvote that idea.vorticism wrote: β11 Mar 2022, 18:38Since the floor can intersect with the T-tray beneath the survival cell, it should be possible to turn the T-tray into the inlet, and route a duct through a hollowed out floor section. It would be the only way to fit a sizeable duct through that area, since no bodwork is permitted around the side survival cell ahead of the floor. Trade-off would be altering the shape of the floor to achieve this. That said, note the McLaren and the Alfa Romeo/Sauber this year have a step down in the floor in precisely that area this year, so it's not as though the tunnel entry needs to be maximum height in that area, necessarily.
https://i.imgur.com/qezJYWZ.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/IV9rapK.jpg
Another option may be to simply move the sidepot inlet to the front of the floor (below), or near to it at least, if there is some rule governing that shape of the floor front edge that I'm missing. I dub them floorpods.
https://i.imgur.com/Omo2Hay.jpg
Massive question isβ¦. How much rear tyre management can you get from the floor edge under this era of regulations? Could it all be done by the floor edge or do you rely a lot on the sidepod to do your work?
I was thinking about this today. What would teams do if the sidepods didnt have any cooling purposes and were purely aerodynamic.DRCorsa wrote: β18 Feb 2024, 17:55I think RedBull took my idea FROM HERE and refined it a little bit... 4 years later...
The current sidepods are dummies.
The radiators are placed inside the cannons and the inlet air goes upward to the radiators. That's why their inlet is below and facing upwards.
Later they will just bring the smaller sidepods that will only be used just as airflow conditioning devices. They can do whatever they want with those "sidepods".
https://i.ibb.co/qxfV5mc/RB20.png
My idea as a comparison:
https://i.ibb.co/CHcLBxH/IMG-1849.jpg
https://i.ibb.co/4NT3T3w/IMG-1848.jpg