R30's diffuser :
(with a modified scrabs drawing)
heheh it worked in the 'preview,' thought it would work when i posted! it's the same photo that you posted highlighting the diffusor, only it shows the entire carBlackout wrote:We don't see any photo
Yes, this is better selection. R30 diffuser is pretty big, although there will be new one for Bahrain, same as there will be new floor, rear wing and front wing.Blackout wrote:R30's diffuser :
(with a modified scrabs drawing)
They use high flo paint because they know that every photographer at the circuit is going to snap the car and sell the pics to every person who will snap them up.Fil wrote:After doing a bit of research online, Flo-vis paint comes as a transparent UV paint as well (& i'm told this is used by F1 teams as well).myurr wrote:It's also used extensively in private tests and shakedowns, such as the straight line tests that the teams occasionally carry out.newbie wrote:everyone with a windtunnel uses flow-viz paint...its a key development tool. However most teams confine it to the windtunnel as any prying eyes will thank you very much for a public display like McLaren and Renault appear to be showing.
I'm too lazy to try find it, but i distinctly remember a photo from 09's pre-season tests of a Williams crew member, with a UV light in his hand, closely observing the FW31's sidepod..
Whether the other teams also validate at the tests with the transparent UV paint, i don't know, but i'd assume it very likely.
Why McLaren (and seemingly Renault) tend to use a visually apparent flo-vis paint, i'm not really sure..
That's certainly a positive side effect I hadn't thought of. Good for business, good for general interest.Raptor22 wrote:Notice, the MP4/25 is the most photographed f1 car launched thus far.
everyone is photographing the car, every forum is abuzz about the Maclaren, why?
Flo-vis paint...
Yes that's a clever little detail, built like tunnels too, I presume to meet floor requirements. I have to wonder if it truly does much of anything though, as under braking and corner entry this part of the splitter is only a smidge off the ground so there's not much chance to lower the pressure in that area, except down the straights, or perhaps under hard throttle corner exit as in slow corners. I would like to see to see what the inlets are like.