As many people have been telling them for eighteen months, a double element front wing doesn't provide enough stability under braking and when the wing is close to the ground. They have this as a stop-gap because they still don't know how to make a triple element front wing work.Timstr wrote:Rectangular holes in the front wing. What good could that do?
Mercedes GP
Nico Rosberg was on duty in Jerez today for the fourth and final day to conclude the team’s second pre-season test.
Nico’s programme was to continue the set-up and development work from the previous three days, alongside further acclimatisation to the KERS system. A precautionary engine change interrupted the programme with good work from the team enabling Nico to go back out on track by mid-afternoon for a series of aerodynamic development evaluations. Nico completed 45 laps today.
The next track action will be the four-day test which starts at Barcelona’s Circuit de Catalunya on Friday 18 February.
Nico Rosberg: “Every lap is beneficial in pre-season testing and the work that we achieved today was good, however the long stoppage was unfortunate. It’s a steep learning curve and there is a lot of hard work ahead, but with the developments that we have to come, I am confident that we will continue to progress.”
Ross Brawn: “The four days in Jerez have proved to be extremely useful for the team, although the test has not been without its challenges. We had good reliability for the middle two days which allowed us to accumulate a lot of mileage, however there are issues to be resolved so that we can maximise our track time for the remaining two tests. Both Michael and Nico continue to feel comfortable in the car and our priorities remain on reliability, developing our understanding of the tyres and the KERS, whilst simultaneously pushing on with the developments still to come.”
The others you refer to are true slot gaps.Merc just took a bite out to simulate an extra slot. This should help alleviate any seperations at lower ride heights.(Should help turn in the most, because two piece wing get seperation at low ride height or when wheels are steered more so than a three piece would.)Gui59 wrote:In fact not new, Renault and MC Laren had almost same design last year.
Owen.C93 wrote:This might be a little clearer.
Ferraripilot wrote:kenji8 wrote:
I was wondering the same thing. What are those???
Let's hope it's just their "not caring for testing parts" and not the general quality standard in fabricationracer_boy wrote:Something else some of you might find interesting... I don't think we will be seeing very much of the W02 'test bodywork again... look at just how badly finished it is... lots of pock marks and dents...esp near the "ExpostBrief" sticker on the front sidepod edge they really didn't care very much about the aero on the test car did they?
[img]http://motorsport.nextgen-auto.com/gall ... 09.jpg[img]