hardingfv32 wrote:
That leaves use with the issue of the amount of flex to be allowed. Just about any amount of flex can be set with the rules and an appropriate static test designed to check that number. But, what is so wrong with the level that the teams and officials have in place now and agreed to? Are we aware of any team asking for flex levels or testing. All of the participants are happy, why not you?
What makes you think all the teams are happy? I think it was Stefano Domenicalli that made a statement how he was unhappy that due to the current interpretation of the rules, Ferrari now had to spend considerable time and money developing a flexible wing.
Could it be that your favorite team is not as proficient with wing design as other teams?
Personally, I don't really have a favourite team... and if I did have a preference, it would actually be Red Bull, so there goes your fanboy assumption. Nice try.
You agreed to allow flexing per your statements and the officials have decided on the levels based on their static test designs. What is the issue?
The levels are not realistic, and now this is forcing many teams to spend considerable time and money developing flexible composites that have no real application or use outside of Formula One front wings. Flexible diffusers? Not allowed. Flexible rear wings? Not allowed (Ferrari found that out a few years ago).
The issues are, to be clear: money and time wasted on a useless technology that will not improve the sport and that contravenes 3.15.
mep 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 :
- 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.
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.
...
The rule covers just the mounting spot nothing else.
Wrong, and I bolded the part that I am referring to. You'd have to be delusional (or blind) to think that the wing is not moving considerably relative to the sprung part of the car (i.e. the chassis).
hardingfv32 wrote:"The wing is intentionally designed to flex more than what is possible in terms of stiffness. Agreed?"
I am an engineer, please assign some value to the word "stiffness" or "possible". As a car designer I love words like "stiffness", they are so grey. You are try to apply the word as a black and white absolute value and it is not working.
I am also an engineer, so I'd be more than happy to assign a value to those terms.
For the purposes of this discussion, stiffness refers to resistance of deflection due to aerodynamic load, or in more direct engineering terms, the relationship between stress and strain in the front wing of a Formula One racing vehicle.
In laymans terms, the relationship between downforce and how much the wing deflects from its static position.
As for "possible", lets take a conservative approach and go with "what has been accomplished in the past". Therefore, if Coulthard could do 361 km/h at Hockenheim in 2000, and the wing wasn't looking like a frown, I would say that it is POSSIBLE for a current wing to flex significantly less than the current Red Bull wing.
For someone complaining about definitions, you certainly seem to be a lover of playing with semantics.
From what we hear in the press, there is no one complaining about the rule currently.
Please assign some value to the words "we", "hear", "press", "complaining" and "currently". I ask that as I recently read a quote by Domenicalli that certainly showed is displeasure with the current interpretation.
There is no point, the FIA has set the standards and it is time for the teams to figure the issue out for them selves. Is F1 going to outlaw every innovative design just because it costs money to design?
Hmm... what about the current V8's? Limits in metallurgy? They even incorporated a strategy that they would outlaw irrelevant technologies the year after it was initially designed to prevent unnecessary costs (or since it was not mentioned in the last few days in the press, does this comment by the FIA not count?).
Again, sarcasm is a grey subject. I can learn and adjust to your sensibilities.
Just as I am adapting to yours, Brian.