It's launch time! I am happy to present my R01 car. It's a big step on from the car that finished the 2023 season, but the changes to tyre roughness, engine cover regulation volume and free suspension design make it almost impossible to compare the cars like for like.
Much of the early development focused on the cooling package. With the new/expanded regulation volume at the rear I did some experimenting with larger coke bottle areas and no louvres, but for my application found more performance chasing as tight a package as possible down the middle of the car and utilising louvres on the outer edge of the sidepod to facilitate cooling requirements for 100% power. Compared to the '23 car I was able to create a tighter fit around the internals with smaller louvre openings largely due to the work that went into creating optimal flow conditions up to the radiator via my entire revised inlet shape/position.
Front and rear wings are definitely in the 'evo' category over the 2023 designs. With changes to the front wing end plate being the most dramatic departure from last year. This was really only done to bring the car more inline with the spirit of the 2022 generation of F1 car and probably cost performance in that area.
The rear wing has slight revisions across most of it's geometry but is broadly the same concept/design. the changes primarily focused on squeezing out efficiency for Suzuka, but more on that later.
The floor body, diffuser and fences remain pretty much untouched from the end of 2023, with some tweaks underneath and on the floor edge for vortex control being the only updates.
The front and rear suspension are of course all new following the regulation changes and posed one of the bigger challenges due to their large impact on the flow across the entire car. I suspect they have facilitated most of the performance gains I have been able to extract for the car, but difficult to say for sure.
Ultimately I'm pretty happy with how the car has ended up for R01, it's definitely the most refined car I have produced in the few seasons I have competed in and it really pushed on my modelling ability and understanding of how this generation of car works, which is why I started taking part in MVRC to begin with.
As for the race itself, I've tested various different levels of downforce through some wing variations and found that my efficiency pretty much scales exactly with the lap time for this track, so across a boundary of +/- 1Cl I could extract a lap time that was within 0.05s of either end. I suspect this will be my downfall for competitiveness across the season as I struggle to mitigate the large drag impact the tyre roughness has had on the car.
We'll see if I can find some some efficiency gains in the days before the submission deadline, but I am not expecting much to change from here. I'm looking forward to what I am sure will be a nip and tuck season and eagerly await to see what everyone else has cooked up.