i was reading on this website that Ferrari has a new engine mounting to feed the diffuser more air how exactly does it work?
http://www.auto123.com/en/racing-news/f ... tid=115805
If I'm not mistaken, there are two separate rules dealing with engine - minimal weight and minimal COG.bill shoe wrote:his raises the engine CG 15 mm. The engine by rule must weigh 100 kg, and the car weighs, what 650 kg?, so this raises the overall car CG by around 2 mm.
Good catch xpensive!!xpensive wrote:If the height of engine CoG is set relevant to the "reference plane", engine's position per se shouldn't matter,
Ferrari could build an engine with very low CoG and mount it higher, right?
5.4.2 The centre of gravity of the engine may not lie less than 165mm above the reference plane.
This is perhaps what you are referring to?Del Boy wrote:The crankshaft height is set in the engine rules.
does this sentence not imply :the centreline of the engine crankshaft has to be paralell to the reference plane??? centreline of crank does not give a starting or end point from where to take measurements,so an angled centreline does indeedxpensive wrote:This is perhaps what you are referring to?Del Boy wrote:The crankshaft height is set in the engine rules.
5.3.3 The crankshaft centreline must not be less than 58mm above the reference plane.
Ferrari can have their engine upside-down if they want to, hope the do actually.