I have read today that Rosberg said that he was running with aroud 150 kg of fuel and it has not effected car ballance compared to low fuel ride.
Does it mean that fuel is located near horizontal position of CoG of the car?.
Thanks.
Patrick Head has said that they consulted an oil tanker builder, consulted them to design the baffles.gcdugas wrote:Could they use segmented tanks or even dual tanks and pump out fuel in a balanced manner like planes and boats do? What are the rules about this?
Welcome.ggajic wrote:Empty car now weights 620kg. With 240kg of fuel on board it is ~860kg (few kg less or more). I see it as very difficult task to add 240kg in single tank and still have same center of mass once it is gone.. I`m not sure if F1 cars can have multiple fuel tanks like airplanes do..
No car will be using 240kg of fuel... 180kg maxggajic wrote:Empty car now weights 620kg. With 240kg of fuel on board it is ~860kg (few kg less or more). I see it as very difficult task to add 240kg in single tank and still have same center of mass once it is gone.. I`m not sure if F1 cars can have multiple fuel tanks like airplanes do..
If they replaced the petrol with water they could put ladders on top and a rear brake man at the back and race the fastest fire engines ever.ISLAMATRON wrote:pumps and baffles and 1 way flaps
plus they have a "foam sponge" to further help reduce splashing... or is it sploshing?