I agree, they are the same, but you can't tell anything for sure till tomorrow ... most teams usually leave older spec wings on display outside the garage on Thursday, you don't want the pitlane tour-parties tripping over your new gear.Halgovern wrote:the cascades look the same to me
Maybe to win the championship this year.raymondu999 wrote:I don't understand why teams would invest on more development of the fduct when it's a banned technology next year
Did they also change to blowing to lower element? I always thought it was the upper element. This one looks like a Renault solution (Which in case I am right would be surprising, cause McLaren came up with the F-Duct in the first place)feynman wrote:clearer view of the hole
Yeah you are right. There are no visible adjustment holes in the side of the end-plate.feynman wrote:I didn't think they adjusted rear wings anymore (at least not on the car with an allen key) ... they arrive with the wing that the simulation says they will need, and if they need to change levels, they unbolt it and then bolt-on one of the differently angled wing that they keep in the trucks/air-freight.n smikle wrote: Guess they want to be able to adjust the flap more easily.
I'd imagine all manner of tiny percent improvements in using fixed, rigid, factory set rear-wings, as opposed to carrying largely-unused adjustment mechanisms for a race distance.
I thought that was Ackerman? I always thought anti-Ackerman was having the outside turn less? I could be wrong thoughn smikle wrote:I believe it was Marcush that told me that it is the norm Formula1 cars to sometimes run "Anti-ackerman" steering angles. That is the outer wheel turns more than the inner. It's not kinematically ideal, but it is done depending on the behaviour of the tyres.