@ ESPI
Yes, I see where you are coming from.
What stands out is your prediction on the pullrod front suspension. It hasnt been done since Arrows in 2001, and apparently the CofG benefit of Pullrod fronts offset against the aero benefit of a raised nose does not warrant the Pullrod fronts.
scarbs wrote:...as the raised nose aerodynamic concept took hold, teams found the gains from a high nose offset the CofG gain of pull rod suspension.
Going the with pullrod front and rear is pretty spectacular if they do. I can see why they would do it. The minimum weight of cars without the driver has increased, as well as the addition of KERS for this year. So CofG plays a marginally bigger role this year, and is somthing that plagued Mercedes throughout 2010.
In addition, their nose concept wasnt working as well as had been hoped(quoting some posters here, but I think it was evidently not working as hoped).
Adds a spin on things compared to what I think will happen!
*Edit
I remember when RBR’s pull rod suspension was first introduced and virtually all designers were giving push rod suspensions a small stand alone advantage. Looking back to everything that RBR have done, it’s all about the presentation of the air at the back. The pull rod suspension, the glove fitting engine covers and the exhaust. Everything Newey has done in this area is not an advantage in itself, but the ability to give exceptional levels of down force without the benefit of a DDD. You only have to look at the performance of the RBR against the Brawn to realise different forces were at work here.
This year we had every team copying the RBR nose, next year I can see the whole hog getting copied because of the advantage this will bring.