I'm pretty sure that the FIA flex tests performed on the bib are carried out in an upwards direction (happy to be proven wrong if I am), one hydraulic piston is placed under the centre front of the bib and forced upwards at a given force, then the piston is moved to the side of the bib and the same is repeated (i.e. also in a straight up movement).wesley123 wrote:I just have to disagree with the flexing evidence. I mean afterall, the splitter gets an huge inpact hitting the ground, so or it would just be shredded apart or flex like that.
EDIT: NVM the above said, you can see the whole tea tray flexing. This what it actually does at high speeds, then the tea tray comes up allowing an lower front ride height. No fia test can fix this as the bib stay is fixed at some point thus wont bend in that condition, it can only bend up it seems.
If however the RB bib is moving longitudinally (i.e. rather than "bending", the whole plank or section of it is sliding toward the back of the car) when a real-world load is applied (i.e. one moving both upwards and backwards, like the road surface would when the car is running at speed), the bib stay could be as rigid as you like, providing it had a hinge at the top and bottom allowing it to move forwards and backwards as necessary, while appearing stiff when a direct upwards force was applied for the FIA test.