No you are talking a bunch of jibberish. Rules are set to follow.Rob01 wrote:HampusA. you are talking about the spirit of the rule.
Again, i have no problems with the wing at all but to say to my face and deny that the wing is illegal is beyond me.
No you are talking a bunch of jibberish. Rules are set to follow.Rob01 wrote:HampusA. you are talking about the spirit of the rule.
yes and on the other hand it is allowed to flex 20mm, see the contradiction.HampusA wrote:Doesn´t matter, the rules clearly state that it´s illegal for part on the car to flex. RBR wing does flex, thus it´s illegal. NO MATTER WHAT THE TESTS SAY.
The wing do flex more then 20mm aswell. Again, if you know the metric system you would agree only by going by pictures.
under all circumstanceswesley123 wrote:Also have you noticed that that ground scraping of the front wing only happens under braking and kerbriding? isnt it logical that the front comes down under braking, thus it is more likely to hit the ground?HampusA wrote:Doesn´t matter, the rules clearly state that it´s illegal for part on the car to flex. RBR wing does flex, thus it´s illegal. NO MATTER WHAT THE TESTS SAY.
The wing do flex more then 20mm aswell. Again, if you know the metric system you would agree only by going by pictures.
under all circumstancesThe RBR has more rake so the wing is automaticly closer to the ground
under all circumstanceswith ground effect it generates more df thus gets sucked closer to the ground.
under all circumstancesIt is not flexing any more then another front wing, the front wing just generates more df, allowing more flex.
1. Just says how shitty FIA tests are performed.wesley123 wrote:1.yes and on the other hand it is allowed to flex 20mm, see the contradiction.HampusA wrote:Doesn´t matter, the rules clearly state that it´s illegal for part on the car to flex. RBR wing does flex, thus it´s illegal. NO MATTER WHAT THE TESTS SAY.
The wing do flex more then 20mm aswell. Again, if you know the metric system you would agree only by going by pictures.
2.Also, have you ever thought that the wing is within this 20mm flex with the load, but a front wing generates much more load thus, it will logically flex further.
3.Also have you noticed that that ground scraping of the front wing only happens under braking and kerbriding? isnt it logical that the front comes down under braking, thus it is more likely to hit the ground?
4.The RBR has more rake so the wing is automaticly closer to the ground, with ground effect it generates more df thus gets sucked closer to the ground. It is not flexing any more then another front wing, the front wing just generates more df, allowing more flex.
Apart from that, arent these tests there to deem if a car is legal or not? The RBR passes these tests so I cannot see in what way it is illegal.
I suggest you to take off your anti-red bull glasses and get a more objective stance.
As far as you seeing the wing touch/scrap the ground we ALL see it too. This doesn't make the wing ILLEGAL.
Also have you noticed that that ground scraping of the front wing only happens under braking and kerbriding?
I'm unable to locate it, but may I ask if breaking is mentioned as an extraordinary event in the regulations, excusing it from the "prohibited under all circumstances"?article 3.15 wrote:Any device or construction that is designed to bridge the gap between the sprung part of the car and the ground is prohibited under all circumstances. No part having an aerodynamic influence and no part of the bodywork, with the exception of the skid block in 3.13 above, may under any circumstances be located below the reference plane
F1 Rules wrote:3.15 Aerodynamic influence :
With the exception of the driver adjustable bodywork described in Article 3.18 (in addition to minimal parts solely associated with its actuation) and the ducts described in Article 11.4, any specific part of the car influencing its aerodynamic performance:Any device or construction that is designed to bridge the gap between the sprung part of the car and the ground is prohibited under all circumstances.
- must comply with the rules relating to bodywork ;
- must be rigidly secured to the entirely sprung part of the car (rigidly secured means not having any degree of freedom) ;
- must remain immobile in relation to the sprung part of the car.
No part having an aerodynamic influence and no part of the bodywork, with the exception of the skid block in 3.13 above, may under any circumstances be located below the reference plane.
With the exception of the parts necessary for the adjustment described in Article 3.18, any car system, device or procedure which uses, or is suspected of using, driver movement as a means of altering the aerodynamic characteristics of the car is prohibited.
While I put emphasis in my original points, you may have gone a step far here – there's a fine line between putting a point across clearly, and shouting while not listening.HampusA wrote:F1 Rules wrote:3.15 Aerodynamic influence :
With the exception of the driver adjustable bodywork described in Article 3.18 (in addition to minimal parts solely associated with its actuation) and the ducts described in Article 11.4, any specific part of the car influencing its aerodynamic performance:Any device or construction that is designed to bridge the gap between the sprung part of the car and the ground is prohibited under all circumstances.
- must comply with the rules relating to bodywork ;
- must be rigidly secured to the entirely sprung part of the car (rigidly secured means not having any degree of freedom) ;
- must remain immobile in relation to the sprung part of the car.
No part having an aerodynamic influence and no part of the bodywork, with the exception of the skid block in 3.13 above, may under any circumstances be located below the reference plane.
With the exception of the parts necessary for the adjustment described in Article 3.18, any car system, device or procedure which uses, or is suspected of using, driver movement as a means of altering the aerodynamic characteristics of the car is prohibited.
It's only illegal when the FIA says it is. That said, I think the FIA have good cause to say it's illegal.HampusA wrote:Not screaming at anyone, just making the text bigger for people having a hard time reading.
Bottom line is the wing is illegal. Sure other wings are aswell but to deny that the RBR wing is perfectly in tune with the regulations is amusing to me.
I´m out.
HampusA wrote:rules
You know that in your wordings, every car is illegal right? You cannot make anything without a degree of freedom, anything flex and will flex, the laws of gravity also work in Formula1 for your information.FIA Rules wrote:3.17 Bodywork flexibility :
3.17.1 Bodywork may deflect no more than 20mm vertically when a 1000N load is applied vertically to it 800mm
forward of the front wheel centre line and 795mm from the car centre line. The load will be applied in a
downward direction using a 50mm diameter ram to the centre of area of an adapter measuring 300mm x
150mm, the 300mm length having been positioned parallel to the car centre line. Teams must supply the
adapter when such a test is deemed necessary.
You know that you are the only one who is having problems reading right?HampusA wrote:Not screaming at anyone, just making the text bigger for people having a hard time reading.
Bottom line is the wing is illegal. Sure other wings are aswell but to deny that the RBR wing is perfectly in tune with the regulations is amusing to me.
I´m out.
The rule I quoted isn't about degrees of freedom, or flex, or laws of gravity. It's a simple matter of "if it gets from the sprung bit to the ground, it's illegal".wesley123 wrote:HampusA wrote:rulesYou know that in your wordings, every car is illegal right? You cannot make anything without a degree of freedom, anything flex and will flex, the laws of gravity also work in Formula1 for your information.FIA Rules wrote:3.17 Bodywork flexibility :
3.17.1 Bodywork may deflect no more than 20mm vertically when a 1000N load is applied vertically to it 800mm
forward of the front wheel centre line and 795mm from the car centre line. The load will be applied in a
downward direction using a 50mm diameter ram to the centre of area of an adapter measuring 300mm x
150mm, the 300mm length having been positioned parallel to the car centre line. Teams must supply the
adapter when such a test is deemed necessary.
If you can prove that the exists a rule r such that complies_with(red bull, r) implies for all rules r complies_with(red bull, r) I'll be impressed. The fact that it complies with this rule does not imply that it complies with all rules.You know that you are the only one who is having problems reading right?HampusA wrote:Not screaming at anyone, just making the text bigger for people having a hard time reading.
Bottom line is the wing is illegal. Sure other wings are aswell but to deny that the RBR wing is perfectly in tune with the regulations is amusing to me.
I´m out.
Anyway, in the rules the flex is under 1000N, then it may flex 20mm, we all know a front wing generates much and much more vertical load then that, so isnt it logical that the wing will flex further then?
Apart from taking off your anti-Red Bull glasses i suggest you to get some knowledge in the laws of physics, since you do not seem to understand it.
Agreed... Well, more to the point, I think that the FIA's implementation of a clear rule is crap. That said, near enough everyone has them now (hell, even HRT), I don't think there's anything unfair going on... Lets talk about something more interesting.andrew wrote:If the wing is illegal, prove it. Nothing has been proven except that you think that the FIA tests are crap.HampusA wrote:Because the tests are lousy. If you can´t understand over 2 pages that the wing is infact illegal then i don´t know what to say.
Again, don´t mention other cars, i know some are not legal but we are strictly talking RBR here.
Still, the RB7 passes these, so the car is legal. These rules are here and in scrutineering it is controlled if these rules are followed. The rules are as lousy as they want it to make, that doesnt matter, as long as it passes scruteneering it is legal, how hard is that to understand?HampusA wrote:Because the tests are lousy. If you can´t understand over 2 pages that the wing is infact illegal then i don´t know what to say.
I never mentioned another car.Again, don´t mention other cars, i know some are not legal but we are strictly talking RBR here.