The distance from front wheel centre line to leading edge of the front wing must be constant 1000mm. Both Lotus fail that check, so they need to be a bit shorter.
I'd also align them on the rear wheel centre line and check the back of the car lines up, and that the kink in those with angular fins line up.
The other advantage of aligning the rear wheel centre line is that it enables comparison of the packaging at that end. Most of the wheelbase variation occurs between the drivers headrest and the rear wheel centreline.
I did a doodle of this in another thread, here's the sketch and posts:
richard_leeds wrote:Here are the diagrams from the FIA regs. Take care over dimension 4, some cars have shorter noses, ie Williams. Stretching the cars in horizontal and vertical to fit those templates should give you a reasonable comparison.
*** updated diagram ****
richard_leeds wrote:I think there could be better reference points for calibrating the photos. The tyres provide a 660mm reference, that is also rounded. Using teh bodywork rules gives sharper points over longer distances.
Reg 3.16.1 defines the sharkfin/airbox dimensions. That kink in the sharkfins must be 1000 from the rear wheel centreline. Also the crash structure and rear wing end plate are limited to 595 & 600mm from the rear wheel centreline, lets say that is 600mm - I'm sure we'll tolerate that 5mm rounding error
That gives 1600mm reference dim from rear of car bodywork to the kink in the fin profile. Those cars without the angular fin can use 600mm to the rear of the wing end plate or crash structure
Finally, there is another check in that the leading edge of the front wing has to be 1000 from the front wheel centreline. There is a rule about the nose being a max 1200mm from the front wheel centreline, I suspect most cars use that other than Williams.
So, I'd expect to see overlays featuring the rear wheel centreline and rear bodywork matching on every car. The kink on the fin should also exactly match for cars with angular fins. You can use these points to stretch the cars for height and length (separately of course).
You'd then see cars with different wheelbases due to:
- Longer air box (ie the driver is further forward)
- Longer distance from airbox to front wheel centreline