mwillems wrote: ↑16 Sep 2024, 21:23
hollus wrote: ↑16 Sep 2024, 18:33
Looking at past races onboards... there isn't rear facing footage for both drivers at every race. Where there is footage:
Whatever is going on with this DRS edge lift, it was already there (looks like with a smaller movement) in Monza in Piastri's car, but it does not seem to have been there, also for Piastri, in Zandvoort.
Norris had a bit of it in Spa.
Piastri did not have it in Hungary. Norris didn't either in Hungary.
Norris didn't have it in Silverstone.
Norris had a minusculous amount of it in Austria.
Piastri did not have it in Spain.
It was either absent on miniscule for Piastri in Miami.
Norris didn't have it in Jeddah.
So either this a relatively new development, or it correlates with very low load wings.
The wing at Baku was the Spa and Monza wing, so your observations seem to align correctly with and confine any real flex to this wing.
But it's worth noting that that wing is used on tracks with very high speed and long straights, which will also be part of the reason for flex.
The rigidity/thickness of the different wings may not be that different but the forces they expect to receive are.
Seems like quite a cute design.
I agree with this.
There's note, generally on forum, in various projections and description such as "cheating, grey area, intent of rule" etc which don't seem to apply here.
My knowledge of the rules and absolute nuance is not going to be a match for those working within the team and holding responsibility for compliance. But, it does look through comparison to walk past the rule set if examined against them.
It appears located without movement via it's pivot, stays in place until commanded in respect of control (how is "control determined ? ) if that control is the position of the actuation mech, its "home" position vs it's activated "open" position. In other words, it looks at assurance the driver only can command it, which it seems to do.
Rigidly fixed to structure, tick. Not able to move unless commanded, tick.
Is there a specification for the flap strength/torsional competence ? Doesn't appear to be, certainly not quoted by anyone so far. How can the FIA judge this without specific criteria ?
Conventionally, and using knowledge from Mercedes penalised wing in Brazil, that gap was tested with a "go no go" type gauge. That method pulls a set size object through the gap in control load that's specified. Then, attempts to pull a one size up object, 1mm increase in that case, through the same gap. If that's not possible, then the gap passes scrutiny.
Often incorrectly quoted by MB supporters & TW
as failed by 1mm, which is completely untrue, as that larger test object cannot DEFINE the potential movement available between the top and lower flap, in that case. Just that it fails the proscribed test.
IF this current wing is tested in the same way ( needs more intimate knowledge here) and the teams keep their own tools to replicate FIA proceedings, then it would appear there's possibility of test method trying to pull a flexible flap structure closer to the main plane below, this preventing a "failure " in that test routine.
I dont know about "grey" area, looks like the FIA don't have enough black & white to go round in this case
unless someone can indicate differently.
As already pointed out, on forum, there's never going to be no flex in things. Unless there's detailed and commonly carried out strain type testing, then you cannot enforce compliance, logically. There doesn't APPEAR to be one noted for this element in existence.
Flrxing structure in F1 is just routine, without specific details, it's free.
Other notable practitioners that do this with routine ease are helicopter blade structure, snowboard and ski structures, daily routine in manufacture of playing torsional against structure against lifing of component, all to deliver desirable performance in their field. Theres no real secrets about this.