Yes they are, we all agree with that bit, its an interesting technical challenge for the other teams.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Then tell me, the wing isnt flexing and Red Bull arent finding a clever way to circumvent the test.............
Yes they are, we all agree with that bit, its an interesting technical challenge for the other teams.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Then tell me, the wing isnt flexing and Red Bull arent finding a clever way to circumvent the test.............
xpensive wrote:On topic now:
As this has been discussed before, the rules are written for isotropic materials, such as aluminum or standrard cross-ply fibers, but when you start to get a grip of what un-isotropic materials can do for you, the jeanie is out of the bottle.
For MrE's old spannerman, this must be a mouthful to take in, why people like Newey can make him look rather stupid.
"Really, so a drag induced load can make the wing point downwards just like that, had no idea?"
Ban the front-wing altogether, this will solve a whole heap of problems right there.
segedunum wrote:Circumvent what test, exactly? THE test is static. It passes. Nothing is circumvented. Certain idiots don't seem to be able to understand that there are no on-track, dynamic measurements taken, and for good reason. All of the lovely animated GIFs we've seen show the whole car moving in one form or another. No attempt to get a static reference ever works.
Photo and video evidence cannot be measured and quantified, so shut up please. Suggesting that on a technical forum and thread is so daft it isn't even funny.
The right is reserved to change those static tests to attempt to recreate forces involved when the car is moving, but the fact is that there is a great deal of movement within the car that will not happen when it is stationary. What Charlie Whiting and the FIA can't feasibly do is keep changing static tests forever. The static load tests and regulations are there to catch flexible bodywork that is unsafe. Since RB's bodywork can withstand the required load and has the required strength then Brabham's spanner man, as xpensive affectionately calls him, can't see an issue. I don't see what else he can do.
I know some of you are desperately upset that your team didn't think of it, whoever that is, and it's going to take them forever to catch up, but arguing that black is white won't change the way cars are tested. Your interpretation of the regulations is neither here nor there. I see one or two people are also upset about some form of spinning mass damper that RB may or may not have, which shows you where they're coming from.
Now, can we get back to the discussion of what Red Bull might actually be doing please?
Seg ,no I´m not going to shut up .It is possible to measure on the fly and not just because the FIA does not have the balls to enforce a set of tests suitable to detect cars not being legal under all conditions we have to live with it.We have long left the times when a set of rulers and a weighbridge was the best you could find in terms of measuring equipment. Teams like redBull run highly sophisticated metrology equipment in their tunnel testing and oops it is possible to measure on the fly if you really want to...segedunum wrote:Circumvent what test, exactly? THE test is static. It passes. Nothing is circumvented. Certain idiots don't seem to be able to understand that there are no on-track, dynamic measurements taken, and for good reason. All of the lovely animated GIFs we've seen show the whole car moving in one form or another. No attempt to get a static reference ever works.
Photo and video evidence cannot be measured and quantified, so shut up please. Suggesting that on a technical forum and thread is so daft it isn't even funny.
The right is reserved to change those static tests to attempt to recreate forces involved when the car is moving, but the fact is that there is a great deal of movement within the car that will not happen when it is stationary. What Charlie Whiting and the FIA can't feasibly do is keep changing static tests forever. The static load tests and regulations are there to catch flexible bodywork that is unsafe. Since RB's bodywork can withstand the required load and has the required strength then Brabham's spanner man, as xpensive affectionately calls him, can't see an issue. I don't see what else he can do.
I know some of you are desperately upset that your team didn't think of it, whoever that is, and it's going to take them forever to catch up, but arguing that black is white won't change the way cars are tested. Your interpretation of the regulations is neither here nor there. I see one or two people are also upset about some form of spinning mass damper that RB may or may not have, which shows you where they're coming from.
Now, can we get back to the discussion of what Red Bull might actually be doing please?
segedunum wrote: Do you have an exact figure as to how much the front wing is flexing when out on track JET? If not, then you have nothing. Enforcement of regulations depend on measurable figures. It's not permissable? Really? My, Red Bull must be really surprised about all those disqualifications they have been acquiring..........
JET, there are times when I do feel for you. It must really suck to have the kind of logic you appear to have.
=D>segedunum wrote:Now, can we get back to the discussion of what Red Bull might actually be doing please?
The effect can be created with isotopic materials too if you give them the right asymmetric profile. Damn physics!xpensive wrote:go back to Alu for Formula One?
xpensive wrote:However, when you start to understand un-isotropic materials, ther's no telling where it might end. When the Swedish Griffin-fighter was designed, which is some 30 years ago, they took a serious look at having un-isotropic wings from carbon-fibre, having wings that bent down with speed, meaning that you could do a dive knowing that your wings are in position when you begin the climb. But that was in the technology's infancy why they declined the concept.
This was at my old university and I was actually involved as a student, why I for once have first hand info here, but anyway, you either accept this technology or we go back to Alu for Formula One?
Hell. I can design a cantilever beam that points up with downwards load, as long as I can apply some torque to it.
Please humour us by quoting the parameter that is used to define acceptable, and then tell us where RB fail that parameter.Ferraripilot wrote:Therein lies the rub, legal. The component must not flex beyond the set parameter which all teams respect