We can't prove you're wrong on that, but you can't prove that Ferrari found pushrod to be better for their car.ringo wrote:Haha, trying to turn the page. Ferrari were scared of using it, that's all.
We can't prove you're wrong on that, but you can't prove that Ferrari found pushrod to be better for their car.ringo wrote:Haha, trying to turn the page. Ferrari were scared of using it, that's all.
"A" sounds like engineering. "B" sounds like malarkey.raymondu999 wrote:So then. To summarise:
Theory A) Ferrari tested the pullrod solution, pushrod solution and their weird franken-pushrod solution. They found franken-push to be the best solution, better than the pullrod, for their car philosophy
Theory B) Ferrari didn't fully understand pullrod, and were too scared to go that route, fearing that their implementation might be more bad than good
I think based on the constraint around the 2011 rule and trend(in that no more DDD), that might be the case. Though I don't see what Ferrari's solution as that "franken". Yes it swept forward quite a bit, but that again comes down to packaging to make room for what they need room for, and in this case I'd imagine it being to clean up rear end aero for rear wing to be more effective, the same reason why RBR went pullrod back in 2009, before them knowing the whole DDD debacle was about to start.ringo wrote: Backtracking a moment; from the sounds of things, conventional push rod is inferior?
No one is defending it any more, they are riding on the ferrari franken rod wagon.
Is the general consensus that conventional pre 2011 push rod is an overall disadvantage? No team is using it.
Theoretically painting the car black is better than white because it uses less paint and therefore weighs less. We don't have an all black grid because objectively the difference between the two is minute and there are benefits to having a car that is easy to spot out from all the others.ringo wrote:One has to be more advantageous than the other on the track. Nothing is perfectly equal in reality.
Because the car is a complex overall system of many interconnected parts that calls for many compromises. There will be many parts where performance isn't 100% optimum, but is compromised so as to gain in other conflicting areas of the car.ringo wrote:Now what is the "engineering" reasoning to 2 cars adhering to the same regulations coming to differing conclusions?
No, no, never say such a thing. That's submitting to compromise, which is the wrong way to start out. The CG argument is always strong, only aerodynamics can trump that, and the pull rod wins hands down in that department as well.humble sabot wrote:The CG argument is not very strong because the difference is so small. Keep in mind also that the added weight for kers has a comfortable spot right on the floor, under the fuel cell, so far nobody's put it anywhere else AFAIK.