Correction, the fans were hyping up the diffuser.Florio wrote:How much of a 'Major Upgrade' do they actually mean? I remember the situation last year, and they were hyping up this 'super diffuser' which was sure to put them at the sharp end of the field. The two updates Brawn mentioned are quite significant, especially as they (finally) move to a three element wing.
Well, assuming Giblet isn't going to delete anything else(!), this does actually ring true to me about everything apart from the chassis because the chassis is homologated as well as being put through crash tests. If they change it in any meaningful way then they've got a bit of a headache if they have to retake the tests.luca wrote:@cmckinleyF1 all their staff are working 7 days a week to build all new apart from chassis!!!!!!
Boy, does this ever bring up some hideous imagescsponton wrote:actuator moving back flab
Im not 100% sure but i think Homoogation is scrapped for 2011.segedunum wrote: Anyone know by what date a chassis has to be homologated and crash tests taken by?
I may have confused you by misusing "chassis" in my previous post. I was referring to the survival cell (tub) only.bot6 wrote:I very much doubt that they are using the W01 chassis, since it would be non-compliant with the new weight distribution requirements. Also, the car would show its old roll blade. And they would have to fit the KERS in somehow.
This test car is definitely a new chassis. Might not be the final racing version of the new chassis, but it's definitely more W02 than W01.
What we know for sure is we will see a new exhaust layout and a new front wing on the W02 come the next test. These updates were announced by Brawn. This will probably come with at least a slight modification of the diffuser and floor, since the exhaust will not blow on them in the same way.
As for the other parts of the car (airbox and sidepods mainly), we won't know before the 8th.
That would explain why searching the 2011 regs only gives hits under the Engine section...JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Im not 100% sure but i think Homoogation is scrapped for 2011.segedunum wrote: Anyone know by what date a chassis has to be homologated and crash tests taken by?
From another thread:JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Im not 100% sure but i think Homoogation is scrapped for 2011.segedunum wrote: Anyone know by what date a chassis has to be homologated and crash tests taken by?
Caerdroia wrote:http://www.fia.com/resources/documents/ ... mework.pdf
Just to quote the relevant bit to save you downloading/reading the whole thing:In this respect the new regulations will mandate:
...
• Annual homologation of chassis and main suspension elements
That was the framework for a proposal - a draft plan, really. Wasn't ratified as-is. Look at some of the other points in there...standardized suspension components? Definitely didn't get ratified!imightbewrong wrote: Annual homologation of chassis and main suspension elements
The FOZ wrote:I may have confused you by misusing "chassis" in my previous post. I was referring to the survival cell (tub) only.bot6 wrote:I very much doubt that they are using the W01 chassis, since it would be non-compliant with the new weight distribution requirements. Also, the car would show its old roll blade. And they would have to fit the KERS in somehow.
This test car is definitely a new chassis. Might not be the final racing version of the new chassis, but it's definitely more W02 than W01.
What we know for sure is we will see a new exhaust layout and a new front wing on the W02 come the next test. These updates were announced by Brawn. This will probably come with at least a slight modification of the diffuser and floor, since the exhaust will not blow on them in the same way.
As for the other parts of the car (airbox and sidepods mainly), we won't know before the 8th.
I'll restate:
They could be using the survival cell from the W01 (homologated in 2010) with updated bodywork, nose, suspension, and wings. I don't know of any rule prohibiting this.
The weight distribution isn't a problem using the W01 survival cell - the final weight of the car (obviously) is determined by the entire group of components - and if needed, teams can add ballast as needed, so long as the car doesn't go below 291kg (front) and 340 kg (rear). Further, the weight distro rules (and most technical regs, in fact) only apply to practice, races and qualifying. Preseason testing and in-season testing are not covered in many cases.
The advantage to delaying the homologation of a survival cell is that it allows the team the maximum amount of time to make changes to the survival cell design based on any new concepts they saw other teams running. The case of the F-duct was a good example - many teams lagged or were unable to incorporate the ducting to their cars because they couldn't alter the survival cell design once it was homologated. In that case, I'd certainly send a few bogus tubs for crash testing that I know would fail, as a rumor of difficulties in crash tests would nicely cover up my actual intentions...
Looking strictly at the tub, I've seen nothing that suggest the car being run so far this isn't a W01 tub with different bodywork and wings, and we wouldn't likely know this unless someone from the team actually admitted it.
I'll alter my prediction a bit, though. Whichever tub they're running, whichever roll structure they're running, there's nothing stopping them from adding dummy bodywork to conceal the true geometry - which might be the reason for the very rough looking air intake/roll hoop area. I'll venture that they've got a 2011-legal blade roll structure hiding under some bondo.
My bad, should have checked it further.The FOZ wrote:That was the framework for a proposal - a draft plan, really. Wasn't ratified as-is. Look at some of the other points in there...standardized suspension components? Definitely didn't get ratified!imightbewrong wrote: Annual homologation of chassis and main suspension elements