That is a sensible idea.Pandamasque wrote: I initially thought about limiting DF as a way to free up the aero rules so that the cars could look different while maintaining the current cornering speeds and redirect the aero development towards the reduction of drag which is somewhat relevant outside F1. I never suggested it would magically create lots of overtaking, although it may help somewhat.
I totaly disagree. Having raced a wide variety of race cars, I do not believe that the level of DF has to be high to achieve competitive and spectacular racing.Ogami musashi wrote:That is a sensible idea.Pandamasque wrote: I initially thought about limiting DF as a way to free up the aero rules so that the cars could look different while maintaining the current cornering speeds and redirect the aero development towards the reduction of drag which is somewhat relevant outside F1. I never suggested it would magically create lots of overtaking, although it may help somewhat.
The overtaking problem would have to tackled.
As for cars with "not so much downforce", if you push the example to the extreme (zero downforce) yes; if you push it to 50% of downforce then no.
why?
Because from the leading car, the wake turbulence will be a function of speed okay, since less downforce, less speed so that's good, but it is function of speed over finess, and here is the problem, to make low downforce you usually have to put low finess; As strange as it seems the best finess in autocars is achieved at the max downforce settings (for example monaco trim for 2008 produced ratio of 4,5:1 downforce/drag ratio).
Being included in your DF limitation (to encourage drag reduction) it may work, but special attention is to be given to finess.
Schematically thus, the solution is either ban downforce, or make it high finess ratios.
The overtaking problem spreads actually far beyond the cars themselves to the very concept of F1.
The fact that we want the cars to be the fastest or at least super fast around a track posses a big problem to any aerodynamic regulation because today, all racing series have downforce; technically it is impossible to have a tire giving the same grip curve then downforce because tire's grip tends to vanish away with speed while downforce does the exact contrary, so downforce is needed as long as you want the cars to be fast around a lap. A lap being mostly corners, being fast in corners is what is needed, thus downforce.
So yes the problem is huge.
If by reduction of turbulence you mean having more laminar flow behind the car then yes, slipstream effect is a good effect coming from the wake.Pandamasque wrote:Here's another thing I thought of. The reduction of turbulence behind the car may reduce slipstreaming possibilities, correct?
Where did i say the opposite??autogyro wrote:
I totaly disagree. Having raced a wide variety of race cars, I do not believe that the level of DF has to be high to achieve competitive and spectacular racing.
Here we disagree and i think i've explained why enough.True, other parts of the car would have to be changed to suit very low downforce levels (tyres for a start) but the answer to overtaking and better F1 has got to be a set and far lower DF level.
All the other regulations in F1 have been done to death and the technologies involves are simply internal combustion engine history now, little better than steam. Get rid of FOTA and bring back KERS and other alternative technology. There is a revolution going on and F1 is drifting back to the stone age just so it can pay aerodynamicists wages.
That's a very narrow view sorry.autogyro wrote:The actual speed in a corner is not that relevent.
What you seem to mean is that you like high 'DF' cornering forces, not just high cornering forces.
Not the same thing at all.
There is probably less 'skill' needed to corner a high DF car than a non DF car, even though the speed through the corner is lower.
The non DF car will also look more spectacular on the limit, the high DF car will be on rails until it suddenly lets go.
If the aero people wish to stretch the envelope let them playwith aeroplanes and stop ruining F1. They cost to much.
autogyro wrote:Sorry do not understand what you mean by
"no such thing as 'high DF'cornering neither rails".
The main limit is the tyres always but a high DF will alter the cornering forces.
That doesn't change the fact be it a DF car or not when you corner if the lateral force tyres can produce is exceeded the car will slip the same way.autogyro wrote:There is a high vertical (DF) acting on the whole car and the suspension of the car is totaly compromised for its use.
Of course a high DF car handles differently to a non DF car.
I cannot understand how anyone can ignore this.