I'm surprised that the plank isn't in one piece.
Here's a crude illustration of the advantage of lifting the plank up to allow the front to drop a bit closer to the ground, without having to lift the rear up in the air.
yeap, nice illustration Richard =D> =D>richard_leeds wrote:I'm surprised that the plank isn't in one piece.
Here's a crude illustration of the advantage of lifting the plank up to allow the front to drop a bit closer to the ground, without having to lift the rear up in the air.
Yes, but there is another view of these things, which I think FIA tends to follow : If one team develops a thing that uses a loophole in the regs, others must folow up , and it leads to enormous extra spending at each team. We can assume that the smaller teams would be less effective doing this....and here we are again in the circle. Bigger teams becomes bigger, smaller team become smaller...So why to spend that money for things that anyway will be banned next year. Then it's better to ban them ASAP. This is how I think FIA acts, but I very much blame FIA for not be able to produce clear rules.ESPImperium wrote:All im gonna say is i just wish that the FIA would just say; right, if theres any loopholes in the regs, its up to teams to develop their cars to incorperate such loopholes for the remainder of the season.
Basically meaning that once the rules for a season are aggreed, thats it, they cannot be changed untill the following season. Means teams have to play cattch-up, but also means if a small team stumbles uppon something and rocket to the front, the big teams have to spend resource to catch up.
For this; the F-Duct, Flexable Wings, EBDs and Leaky Damper systems would be areas that teams would have to catch up on.
Id rather that happens than stuff getting banned mid season, unless there is a specific saftey requirement is raised in the mean time.