Now compared to last year in the same period of time, who could tell anything against their truthful words regarding the updates they promised ?
I think now they delivered the goods ...
I think that secondary to this effect is the fact that it creates some kind of a skirt in order to : 1. channel the flow of air underneath the floor towards the diffuser and 2. accelerate this flow in this "new channel". Please correct me if I`m wrong ...bot6 wrote:The idea of the Merc exhaust is exactly the same as that of the blown diffuser Red Bull pioneered last year. That is, re-energizing the airflow as it reaches the rear of the car before it gets to the diffuser...
Last year they have had some real issues with warming up the rear tyres (the hard ones in particular) even on tracks with high temperatures, which were unsolved till the end of the season. So do you think now they are hitting on those to solve the problem? In a less degree maybe ...bot6 wrote: ... Now if you put the exhaust too far forwards, you hit a very wide portion of the flow. So wide that some of it will hit the rear tyres ...
This is what I was thinking. There has to be some pros to the shorter wheel base to go the way the Merc did over the Red Bull idea. Or more like the aero idea Merc is going with works best with a short wheel base.ForMuLaOne wrote:There are two concepts to me:
RB tries to maintain airspeed by reducing volume od their bodywork in a smooth way. Therefore the dont have to fill a low pressure area but try to accelerate it.
Merc tries to fill up a low pressure area behind the sidepots, the air from above helps to suck air from the diffuser.
So to me RB has smaller volume of faster airspeed in the rear section and MB has larger volume. Interesting is the average.
All teams use a honeycomb structure for the floor - it's the only way to achieve the required stiffness without the component weighing a tonne. For complex shapes, nomex honeycomb is used as it is more flexible than aluminium honeycomb, or else a machined polyurethane foam core is used for the really tight and complex stuff.bot6 wrote:I don't think they are allowed to "shape" the underside of the floor since ground effect cars were banned.
The reason the floor seems very thick is because of the way it is built. Most teams seem to use a monolithic carbon laminate for the floor, so essentially one thick skin of carbon fiber and epoxy. That makes the floor thinner.
Merc seem to have used a sandwich structure, so two thinner skins of carbon fiber with a foam or honeycomb structure in the middle. This makes a much stiffer structure for the same weight, but is more difficult and more expensive to make, and more fragile against impacts. Also, it's harder to make complex shapes this way.
The winglets next to the rear wheels are actually classed as part of the brake duct - bizarre rule interpretation by the FIA there.atanatizante wrote:Which are the benefits of the winglets which are placed above and underneath the side of the rear wheel drum?