Ciro Pabón wrote:You don't have to change angles of attack (even if they change) to get an advantage of the front wing bending. Just the diminished ride height is enough to provide you more downforce.
I agree with you. However, some pics posted here seem to show that rbr front wing has an higher incidence than what coming from car body rake. I think it could be either of these two:
-incidence increase is a side effect coming from the twist-bend coupling needed to be flexible but rule-compliant
-the wing in the not-flexed position is in a off-design condition, and rotation is required to get to design point (you can fit bigger section in the mandatory endplate rectangle if you raise leading edge, then twisting will adjust incidence to design point)
Ciro Pabón wrote:About why other teams haven caught up with RBR, I insist that the trick needs a wing that is not elastic, but plastic or thixotropic. That must be quite a trick and requires research.
Agree with you that other teams seem not to be on the same level of mastery (hiding in the word mastery everything from trickery to top end technology); seems very strange to me that they have not found a way to reach the same level (considering also that a lot of people change team every year).
I disagree on it being plastic; maybe it could be thixotropic. I recall a nice thread for last year about dampers that can lower the car as a consequence of excitement frequency.
Maybe it is nothing so exotic, like
bot6 suggests: it is an elastic anisotropic non-linear cantilever beam (lots of academic research is available on the subject).
Agree with
marekk that a big advantage in front downforce has to be compensated with a similar gain in rear downforce, which could be difficult to get; but as for now we do not know if total downforce is rear limited or front limited in rbr chasers' car; in fact domenicali told the press they are lacking front wing downforce compared to what they expected from wind tunnel.