I know this was done on the McMerc SLR road car. I got a picture for reference from Flickr
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I wasn't sure if this was aero or mechanical as it's a bit of both, shift wear it's meant to be if it's in the wrong place.
Without the covers the exiting air flow wouldn't be controlled or localized enough. Once the spokes, or whatever, creates the air flow, the flow must be channeled. Hence the covers.roost89 wrote:I believe they are running those on the Toyota. But I'm not meaning the wheel covers, the actual spokes of the wheel.![]()
I'm not sure if they'd make the wheel too heavy to be viable.
That's the kinda answer I'm after =) Does anyone know for certain? Sorry Axle, but belief doesn't cut it.axle wrote:I believe that the wheels cannot be active aero aides. Ie they must be neutral. Weight is the main area they can find an advantage with them. The wheel rim covers are different and covered by different rules.
cooling of CRC pads and discs may not be a big issue but there are metallic parts (calipers, pistons...) as well as maybe brake fluid lines and the fluid itself for which cooling could be more important. apart from that flow is needed to remove CRC particles.riff_raff wrote:roost89,
The CRC brakes used in F1 don't need a whole lot of cooling. In fact, I'd bet that most of the "brake" cooling airflow is designed to keep the wheel bearing temps in check. Keeping CRC brakes at a consistent temp is more important than keeping them cool.
Doesn't it come under the moveable aero aide rule? The spinners are actually still arn't they...they are just air guides.roost89 wrote:That's the kinda answer I'm after =) Does anyone know for certain? Sorry Axle, but belief doesn't cut it.axle wrote:I believe that the wheels cannot be active aero aides. Ie they must be neutral. Weight is the main area they can find an advantage with them. The wheel rim covers are different and covered by different rules.
Thanks to all other replies so far, I didn't know about the Reventon wheels or the Spykers. Rather interesting.
The rear ones on the Toyota (and others) do not. I think they get around the movable aero aid rule because there primary purpose is brake cooling.axle wrote:Doesn't it come under the moveable aero aide rule? The spinners are actually still arn't they...they are just air guides.roost89 wrote:That's the kinda answer I'm after =) Does anyone know for certain? Sorry Axle, but belief doesn't cut it.axle wrote:I believe that the wheels cannot be active aero aides. Ie they must be neutral. Weight is the main area they can find an advantage with them. The wheel rim covers are different and covered by different rules.
Thanks to all other replies so far, I didn't know about the Reventon wheels or the Spykers. Rather interesting.
Do the units on the Toyota etc move or not?