ow please, read for once.WilliamsF1 wrote:A tonne of time can be gained at the two lesmos and parabolica, best to run more aero with f-duct
=D> =D> Glad you read a lot and for your sake i am hoping the none of the teams run an f-ductwesley123 wrote:ow please, read for once.WilliamsF1 wrote:A tonne of time can be gained at the two lesmos and parabolica, best to run more aero with f-duct
To make the f-duct effective you have to run at much higher angles, and those angles are way too high for monza, so with the F-Duct and the wing set up for this f-duct you will have less top speed then a standard monza wing. on monza you are running your wing with an AoA of 8 degrees max, an f-Duct adding to that wont actually help in staaling as;
1. The wing is already flat, and stalling causes the flow under the wing to become more flat
2. blowing it under the current angle would just attach its flow to the wing, thus increasing drag
3. To even stall the Monza wing you have to run this under weird angles, creating an Handford device, in turn increasing drag and only reducing downforce/optimizing wake.
Sure, doing that will gain you time on lesmos, but you will lose it x4 minimal on the straights as you just lose alot of top speed.
There are 2 corners where downforce matters, Parabolica and Curva Grande(the one after the first chicane), the others dont require any downforce as the speeds are too low for that. So even if you gian time by adding downforce for those 2 turns(wich i doubt as you lose speed through curva grande), you will just lose it by an huge amount. So please tell me, why would an f-duct be usefull?
Stirling MossGaara wrote:what's the name of this driver?
http://img101.imageshack.us/img101/1408/41capture.png
These are wrong examples from the past which they are not related with the 2010 car's dynamic performance which is what makes people think its a McLaren race.Phail wrote:Hardly a McLaren hunting ground....
1999: Hakkinen, spins & stalls his car
2000: Beaten by Michael, nuff' said
2001: Montoya show
2002: Raikkonen, pyrotechnics display
2003: Michelin tyre farce (Ferrari who else?)
2004: Raikkonen, water leak
Only in recent years have McLaren really have anything to show for in Monza, I predict a Red Bull win...
this is the only track where fundamental downforce plays little importance, all the top teams will be running very similar rear wing angles.Vasco wrote:Surely fuel economy would be a vital factor here. They run ~75% full throttle for a whole lap. If it is true that the Renault engine is the most fuel efficient engine on the grid, then there could be strong races for RBR and Renault F1. For qualy I would expect the Mercs and Ferrari engines to do well, but in the race we could see them go into fuel conservation mode a lot earlier than the Renault engines.
Also bear in mind that Mclaren might have to run more wing than say a RBR as they don't have the same fundamental downforce level.
Yeahj, the Red Bull is great in straight lines and allPhail wrote:Hardly a McLaren hunting ground....
1999: Hakkinen, spins & stalls his car
2000: Beaten by Michael, nuff' said
2001: Montoya show
2002: Raikkonen, pyrotechnics display
2003: Michelin tyre farce (Ferrari who else?)
2004: Raikkonen, water leak
Only in recent years have McLaren really have anything to show for in Monza, I predict a Red Bull win...