I believe we are in the same pagemarcush. wrote:From the pics published you cannot see evidence of the nosecone wedging away from the tub .this would require a gap to develop but in the pics thats not obvious
maybe one could interpret this into soem onboard footage...
But I have seen weird things in my life ...and i would not be surprised if there was
indeed some tensional flex in the nosecone of Redbull...tilting the nose by the required amount.
Just some kind of anti roll bar mechanism present in F1 for more than 50 yearsmarcush. wrote:
just imagine have the spars be high or low section in areas of interest ,and you get the flex where you want it.It is really damn easy to built, if you can build a wing ,you can tailor the stiffness real easy by the design of the spars .
you could strt in the middle with a conical tube (very stiff leading into a tube section go to a flat section and expand toward a conical shape towards the endplate..this would create a hinge or a bending section without and by problem .
I'm afraid that Concorde's nose does not droop for active aerodynamics; it was built to droop for visibility whilst on the ground. The test pilots found that the long nose obscured their view whilst taxiing and during take-off, so they built it with the ability to drop the nose when they aren't in flight.mariano.torre.gomez wrote:the best example came out from the BMW concept car , which changes the exterior
shape as per driver wish.
Or Concorde nose!!!!
No that test is applied to the underbody splitter (T-tray) not the front wing, this has been at 200kg for 5mm deflection since Spain 2007.thestig84 wrote:Is the new test 200kgs? If so then have red bull already passed it?? Look at what they say on the official F1.com site...
Although TV footage has shown the Red Bull front wing appear to almost touch the track surface at speed, the rules demand that when static it has to stay 75mm above the ground. Even so the car has passed all the necessary scrutineering checks, including a rigorous one on Saturday in Hungary with 200 kilogrammes applied to the RB6's underbody and the plank.
Link http://www.formula1.com/news/technical/ ... 5/780.html