JET - I was serious. It's a simple question.
Yes, I'd expect this forum to concentrate on "how do they do that". The clue is in the forum's title.
This is actually not true Richard, isotropc material are just that, isotropic, you can fool around a bit with profiles an such but nothing like this. When you see what can be done with your own eyes, promise you will wet your pants. I know I did at that university lab 30 years ago.richard_leeds wrote:[The effect can be created with isotopic materials too if you give them the right asymmetric profile. Damn physics!
richard_leeds wrote: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
That's a little harsh. Video and photo evidence can most definitely be measured and quantified. There is a whole field of fluid dynamic measurements taken by camera: PIV and digital speckle deformation are two that come immediately to mind. There is also the well-used "photo finish" in some racing. I also know that in high-speed munitions impact testing, cameras are used to calculate angles and velocity of the projectiles quite accurately.segedunum wrote: 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 rule is 20mm for 100kg on one side. How much force is there at full speed? 750kg perhaps? Even a conservative 500kg gives 100mm allowable deflection.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:the permissable 20mm.
Agreed. That is the "set parameter" and topic of this thread.Ferraripilot wrote: They pass 3.17 which currently governs 3.15.
I suggest you look at this other thread ... viewtopic.php?f=1&t=9795&view=unread#unreadFerraripilot wrote:My field is litigation, and there is no way I would hang my hat on this bylaw which is currently contradictory to the actual law.
So the question is why don't other teams have the skills to use that allowable 100m deflection?JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Good point Richard.
I agree with xpensive - behaviour of composite beams/panels it is really impressive and sometimes counter intuitive: e.g. you could get torsion applying an axial load.xpensive wrote:This is actually not true Richard, isotropc material are just that, isotropic, you can fool around a bit with profiles an such but nothing like this. When you see what can be done with your own eyes, promise you will wet your pants. I know I did at that university lab 30 years ago.richard_leeds wrote:[The effect can be created with isotopic materials too if you give them the right asymmetric profile. Damn physics!
/off-topicsegedunum 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.
I'll also take the opportunity to repose the question I put in the other thread -Ciro Pabón wrote:The wings cannot move more than 2 cm under a 1000 newton load. It seems to me they are moving more or less what regulations say.
Surely they have more than 1000 newtons load! More in the vicinity of 5000, I'd guess. So, they can easily move more than 10 cm at the tips. It is a cantilever, you know...
So, what's the problem?
Bad losers are losers.