Jonsson wrote:Is this too ridiculous to believe?
In order to maintain constant air flow through the diffuser during low revs, the teams look to the ballast for the answer. Constructors normally use a tungsten ballast located at the lowest point on the car to maintain the lowest possible center of gravity. With a 620 kg minimum, a pre-ballast car weight around 420 kg, and factoring in driver weight ~70 kg, Red Bull saw around 130 kg of weight to deal with the rev-dependent air flow through its diffuser. Instead of a solid tungsten ballast, Red Bull may be utilizing computer controlled, variably discharged according to engine rev, highly compressed air tanks where the ballast is normally located. Although there is no possible way to make this method last a whole race, it is possible for two or three laps in Q3.
Then it wouldn't be ballast. The car would need to still be above minimum weight post quali. If you were blowing your ballast into the air then you wouldn't pass inspection. Unless you're suggesting they use the engine to refill the tanks during the in lap, now that would be one wild idea. Plus i doubt the regs allow for any thrust to come from anything other than engine/kers.