All things equal your are correct, but depending on the layup methods, number of layers cores etc. etc. It could be completely different.gridwalker wrote:The third photo of the Red Bull shows quite a noticable drop in thickness of the main plane as soon as the regulated central section ends : the drop in lateral and torsional strength that occurs around this area must have a significant affect on the asmount of flex offered across the wing assembly.
I thought the same...just wonder if our friend 747heavy is able to find some colseups of the macca nose to compare the section variation between the central zone and the wing.gridwalker wrote:The third photo of the Red Bull shows quite a noticable drop in thickness of the main plane as soon as the regulated central section ends : the drop in lateral and torsional strength that occurs around this area must have a significant affect on the asmount of flex offered across the wing assembly.
The rule is that the wing deflection must not exceed X mm under load Y applied at location Z. The RB complies with the rules.Just_a_fan wrote:The flexible wings are a cheat because they are against the rules
It's been obvious that the tips have been drooping for some time.mep wrote:Now we can see that the wing tips are droping.
I don't think so. You're still going to get a very nice advantage from being able to lower the nose as will as the wing tips themselves. This has to be more than just a wing that bends downwards at the tips, certainly as far as Red Bull are concerned. The only problem is being able to prove that this is happening, and how.The whole nose is definetly not droping I think we can stop this theory now.
Indeed. I hadn't noticed this before but up close you can certainly see it. Of course, it depends on how this section is composed itself but I don't see any reason for it to be otherwise.gridwalker wrote:The third photo of the Red Bull shows quite a noticable drop in thickness of the main plane as soon as the regulated central section ends : the drop in lateral and torsional strength that occurs around this area must have a significant affect on the asmount of flex offered across the wing assembly.
Good pictures. The whole wing section of the Red Bull is definitely lower, I don't think there is any doubt about it. Logically the nose section must be lowering as well to enable that to happen. It's not by much at all, and that might even be legal regardless, but it's enough and the wing itself is contributing the rest of the height drop. This isn't just droopy wingtips. I doubt you can achieve this without dropping the nose in some way otherwise the whole thing might become too unstable.747heavy wrote:Red Bull vs. McLaren
have a look at the height of the centre section of the front wing vs. the front splitter/plank height.
What do you think?