More pics F1snake took of his RA 107-05:
how hot is a cup of tea?Fact of the day: Due to heat transfer, the fuel in a Formula One car can get as hot as a cup of tea!
Ringo,ringo wrote:This thread is quiet all of a sudden? We get what we wanted to see and no posts?
ringo wrote:I guess they took metal off the bolt where they don't need it then.
ringo,ringo wrote:I am not sure if there is any mechanism on the engine to allow for movement. Movement is not what we want.
The loads would be part of the design philosophy, similar to how pistons are designed i would imagine. It's not the same as ignoring loads. Keep in mind i said you add it to your mechanical loads.don´t you think stressing key areas with loads they are not part of your design philosophy (ignoring loads)is somthing an engineer should avoid?
yepthe claim was: with the engine temperatures anything between ambient and say 150°C
and made mainly from alumimium castings ,the tub made from carbonfibre-aluminium Honeycomb with Carbonfibre Not expanding with temperature there will be a mismatch at the Interface between engine and tub with the bolts providing the clamping force resulting in shearforces due to one structure altering their dimension whereas the other very likely not to grow over temps.
No it wont cause misalignment. You see the square metal surfaces, The engine clamps against those with such a high pressure that the temperature change wont cause any relative motion there. Remember as well that the bolt is basically a cantelever anchored into the tub, so it will prevent engine movement.So we still got the engine growing in height as it reaches running temps and taking the bolts secured in the tub with it ,causing misalignment.either when cold or when hot..take your choice and hope for the best.