What the wing is moving!?malcolm wrote: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).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.
Yes, but depending on how far to the right or left of the camera the car was, it could distort the nose. Make is seem thicker as well as make that little antenna seem thicker as well.HampusA wrote: Horizontal angles is the same even if you were to take the picture in 90 degrees tilted.
Two horizontal edges can never change if they are alligned with two other horizontal edges from another picture of the same car at approx the same angle.
They are always parallel unless of course, something is flexing..
I'm not convinced that affine transforms on the camera position could produce the distortion we're seeing there (it's a non-linear distortion, it affects different bits of the nose/wing differently).ecapox wrote:Yes, but depending on how far to the right or left of the camera the car was, it could distort the nose. Make is seem thicker as well as make that little antenna seem thicker as well.HampusA wrote: Horizontal angles is the same even if you were to take the picture in 90 degrees tilted.
Two horizontal edges can never change if they are alligned with two other horizontal edges from another picture of the same car at approx the same angle.
They are always parallel unless of course, something is flexing..
I dont believe the nose flexes, but you are free to disagree.
Belsebob is right, the angles are to close to each other to cause that much distortion. That is clear nose flex.ecapox wrote:Yes, but depending on how far to the right or left of the camera the car was, it could distort the nose. Make is seem thicker as well as make that little antenna seem thicker as well.HampusA wrote: Horizontal angles is the same even if you were to take the picture in 90 degrees tilted.
Two horizontal edges can never change if they are alligned with two other horizontal edges from another picture of the same car at approx the same angle.
They are always parallel unless of course, something is flexing..
I dont believe the nose flexes, but you are free to disagree.
Yes it has been posted on this forum before and the same discussion was had then too.CHT wrote:Not sure if this been posted before.
Got this from Autosport forum
Seriously? Every object in the universe flexes, that's high school physics too. Even a granite wing would move relative to the chasis.malcolm wrote:Seriously?
If the wing flexes, that means the wing tip is moving relative to the chassis.
That's high-school physics right there.
Ok so if i get your point right, to hell with the rulebook it´s not there to do anything, all it is, is a bunch of nice words and some numbers..hardingfv32 wrote:"Either they remove the rule or they start upping their tests with more load and loads in many different areas of the wing."
Or... they change nothing, continue to do what all the teams and officials are presently agreeable to, and completely disregard your view. Do you find that so hard to accept? Such a travesty of the your opinion of the rules!
Brian