Probably because otherwise the spot load could damage the wing. In the race that downforce will act over a large part of the surface.Formula None wrote:I'm trying to image their reasoning for not increasing the test load. Seems simple enough.
Probably because otherwise the spot load could damage the wing. In the race that downforce will act over a large part of the surface.Formula None wrote:I'm trying to image their reasoning for not increasing the test load. Seems simple enough.
March 25, 2011 | by jamesallenonf1
Vettel suffered what looked like a bad blister on his left front tyre and there was something going on with the left front of the Red Bull car, because the underside of the wings seemed to be getting damaged. Although the load tests on the front wings are tougher than last year and wings are deflecting less than before, the feeling is that the Red Bull is still the one with the most wing flex.
FIA even carried out an assymetric front wing deflection test was carried on car numbers 01 and 03 26 March 2011 and both cars passed.March 26, 2011 | by jamesallenonf1
Judging from this high speed photo, the Red Bull still has a front wing which is getting very low to the ground when under aerodynamic load. It passes the much more stringent FIA tests, but clearly there are no limits to what the team can achieve with advanced carbon fibre layering techniques.
It depends on track, but could be even more then this, IMO.bot6 wrote:JET -> My guess would be 1-1.5 seconds a lap, considering the performance difference on the McLaren between before and after the bendy wing.
From the available photos it looks more like pivoting then bending of FW, and effectively just increasing wings angle of attack. If this is the fall, external flow's bend will be (in correspondence to increased downforce) bigger, even better avoiding front wheels. So more downforce, less FW induced drag AND less front tyre drag IMO.shelly wrote:@marekk: I am not sure that flexi wing laptime advantage is due to drag reduction; we also have to condider that the drooping wing will shield the lower part of the front wheels, but it will not shield the upper part (that part that would have been shieled in normal position). So I think there is a drag penalty related to this, that could partly or completely compensate for a reduction in induced drag.
Agree with you that front flexi wing advantage is huge; I think like others in this thread that the big performance jump made by mclaren is more due to front wing than to exhaust.
I think that pivoting is a conseuqnce of bending, like is expalined in the link I posted previously.marekk wrote:From the available photos it looks more like pivoting then bending
The problem is you have to keep the balance IMO.shelly wrote:I think that pivoting is a conseuqnce of bending, like is expalined in the link I posted previously.marekk wrote:From the available photos it looks more like pivoting then bending
What is amazing in my opinion is that after a year or so in which rbr front wing is watched closely, the other big teams seems not to have developed fornt wings that have the same effectiveness.
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Seems too strange other teams have not closed the gap