I can say for myself: it directly affects drag, as well as the flow of air along the body of the car with the steering wheel turned, in short.Dafnalina wrote: ↑03 May 2024, 16:48Sorry, could you explain what was the issue with the way the front of the car conditioned the air? What was the effect on the car?mwillems wrote: ↑03 May 2024, 16:42Most of the changes won't add time, they are simply to let the airflow make its way correctly around the car.
Most of the important work is around conditioning the flow at the front and how the floor uses it. Front and rear geometry changes are to stop the airflow being impeded. Same with front corner and the inlet. Engine cover is about the flow to the rear.
Two things here are to generate time. The wing and the floor. The rest is largely about retaining flow through and around the car.
After 18 months I can finally stop banging on about the front of the car conditioning the air!!![]()
there is a flattening of the upper front arm closer to the outside where it meets the wheel hub.f1rules wrote: ↑03 May 2024, 17:03still not obvious
https://cdn-9.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... etail.webp
https://cdn-8.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... etail.webp
Actually by letting the airflow make its way correctly around the car, you gain time. Unless you define “correct airflow” in a different way.mwillems wrote: ↑03 May 2024, 16:42Most of the changes won't add time, they are simply to let the airflow make its way correctly around the car. The volume of changes won't inform the laptime gain.
Most of the important work is around conditioning the flow at the front and how the floor uses it. Front and rear geometry changes are to stop the airflow being impeded. Same with front corner and the inlet. Engine cover is about the flow to the rear.
Two things here are to generate time. The wing and the floor. The rest is largely about retaining flow through and around the car.
After 18 months I can finally stop banging on about the front of the car conditioning the air!!![]()
The wing didn't work well in low load conditions. This was triggered by low df config, low speed and when airflow was approaching the wing from the side.Dafnalina wrote: ↑03 May 2024, 16:48Sorry, could you explain what was the issue with the way the front of the car conditioned the air? What was the effect on the car?mwillems wrote: ↑03 May 2024, 16:42Most of the changes won't add time, they are simply to let the airflow make its way correctly around the car.
Most of the important work is around conditioning the flow at the front and how the floor uses it. Front and rear geometry changes are to stop the airflow being impeded. Same with front corner and the inlet. Engine cover is about the flow to the rear.
Two things here are to generate time. The wing and the floor. The rest is largely about retaining flow through and around the car.
After 18 months I can finally stop banging on about the front of the car conditioning the air!!![]()
True, since it affects drag.kfrantzios wrote: ↑03 May 2024, 17:10Actually by letting the airflow make its way correctly around the car, you gain time. Unless you define “correct airflow” in a different way.mwillems wrote: ↑03 May 2024, 16:42Most of the changes won't add time, they are simply to let the airflow make its way correctly around the car. The volume of changes won't inform the laptime gain.
Most of the important work is around conditioning the flow at the front and how the floor uses it. Front and rear geometry changes are to stop the airflow being impeded. Same with front corner and the inlet. Engine cover is about the flow to the rear.
Two things here are to generate time. The wing and the floor. The rest is largely about retaining flow through and around the car.
After 18 months I can finally stop banging on about the front of the car conditioning the air!!![]()
It was already going round the car correctly. Those parts needed adapting to work with the new airflow. They aren't finding time in themselves. Apart from the inlet perhaps.kfrantzios wrote: ↑03 May 2024, 17:10Actually by letting the airflow make its way correctly around the car, you gain time. Unless you define “correct airflow” in a different way.mwillems wrote: ↑03 May 2024, 16:42Most of the changes won't add time, they are simply to let the airflow make its way correctly around the car. The volume of changes won't inform the laptime gain.
Most of the important work is around conditioning the flow at the front and how the floor uses it. Front and rear geometry changes are to stop the airflow being impeded. Same with front corner and the inlet. Engine cover is about the flow to the rear.
Two things here are to generate time. The wing and the floor. The rest is largely about retaining flow through and around the car.
After 18 months I can finally stop banging on about the front of the car conditioning the air!!![]()