but wasn't the floor supposed to be plain flat without holes, slots, winglets, etc.? How could they play with that?Phillyred wrote:That was my question as well. I'd love to see the underside of the R31. If this exhaust solution proves to be "the next big thing" Renault may have a few races before other teams devise their own solutions. It appears a lot of the magic of this system may be occurring underneath the car which is hard to see unless Kubica or Petrov pull a "Mark Weber."mith wrote: They can overcome it partially with ignition retardation providing somehow constant flow.
No, it must be flat. No curvature, absolutely flat plane.mith wrote:I thought floor has to be flat, but maybe it's not that it must be flat but rather it can't have anything below it's level...
OK, I believe you, but my idea came from curved up edges of the floor which are quite popular among various teams. How are they making it legal?manchild wrote:No, it must be flat. No curvature, absolutely flat plane.mith wrote:I thought floor has to be flat, but maybe it's not that it must be flat but rather it can't have anything below it's level...
+1mith wrote:OK, I believe you, but my idea came from curved up edges of the floor which are quite popular among various teams. How are they making it legal?manchild wrote:No, it must be flat. No curvature, absolutely flat plane.mith wrote:I thought floor has to be flat, but maybe it's not that it must be flat but rather it can't have anything below it's level...
No exception regardless on position. The curvy bits you see on front or sideways are not below bodywork. Floor must be flat only if there is bodywork above it. They can bent it upwards where there is no bodywork on top of it (anti ground-effect rule).forty-two wrote:Good question. Perhaps there's exceptions allowed in the front section?
So there is an exception, but based not on position, but instead on whether or not bodywork is placed above it?manchild wrote:No exception regardless on position. The curvy bits you see on front or sideways are not below bodywork. Floor must be flat only if there is bodywork above it. They can bent it upwards where there is no bodywork on top of it (anti ground-effect rule).forty-two wrote:Good question. Perhaps there's exceptions allowed in the front section?