I noticed Mark Webber had one on the RB6 on the right mirror at Monaco.Belatti wrote:Both Ferraris have it, but not the other cars.
I havent seen any shot from there if that is a camera.
And I dont know if that is an aero relevant place to place a camera.
Could it be the software that's used to calibrate the device? I would assume they have to have quite accurate wind speed measurements to be able to correctly make the digital fluidic switch thingymagig (technical term) work. From what I gather the wing was stalling when they didn't want it to and they were losing downforce in the corners. Which would suggest they've not quite cracked the switching of air flow.Skunk0001 wrote:Source: http://www.ferrari.com/English/News/For ... brief.aspxFerrari.com wrote:The F10’s development programme continues apace: Turkey should see the debut of an evolution of the software controlling the blown rear wing and other important advances will be introduced by the end of June
This was mentioned by James Allen in his blog, questioning "Is this Ferrari being provocative?" and he said he would look into what it, so hopefully it'll be clear soon.
http://www.jamesallenonf1.com
Maybe they mean the soft pad on the back of the gloves the drivers wear...
Considering it was not used in Moncao, I'd say no, definitely not.autogyro wrote:Anyone else considered that the Alonso crash in free practice might well have been an inability of Alonso to control the blown rear wing?
If it was, it shows up a very real safety issue.
Of course IMO uncontrolled aero is an unsafe way to develop F1 cars anyway.
Indy has had paddles for quite a while. But yes I agree there are 100s of racing series where the driver has to move a hand to shift.peteskar wrote:Although it was many years ago and none of the current drivers saw this believe it or not F1 cars had gear levers like a road car. I would not say the taking 1 hand off the wheel to adjust a duct is a huge safety issue and very doubtful the cause of Alonso's crash. I think indy cars still do remove there hands to shift with out any issues.
I agree, Alonso is a top driver as are the others so he could easily remove a hand from the wheel without a crash.peteskar wrote:Although it was many years ago and none of the current drivers saw this believe it or not F1 cars had gear levers like a road car. I would not say the taking 1 hand off the wheel to adjust a duct is a huge safety issue and very doubtful the cause of Alonso's crash. I think indy cars still do remove there hands to shift with out any issues.
Fair enough WB but would they have been checking out any aero mods on the rear wing?WhiteBlue wrote:Take it from me if you take it from no one else: Ferrari wasn't using an F-duct in Monaco! I watched all three practise sessions.autogyro wrote: If Ferrari did try their f-duct, did it work incorrectly and dumped DF on the bend?
Realy, strange place for winglets and strange reason to join shark fin to rear wing. Surely not moveable winglets for some reason.raymondu999 wrote:Not flat actually. They had small winglets added on it for just that extra itty bitty bit of extra downforce.
autogyro wrote: Realy, strange place for winglets and strange reason to join shark fin to rear wing. Surely not moveable winglets for some reason.