Will they even need low downforce wings when there are 2 DRS zones on this track?
You can gain from them when you go for medium downforce in corners and still get low drag on the straights.
That was Monza. I'm talking about Canada.Owen.C93 wrote:Except Lewis didn't. Although that may have not been the best decision.raymondu999 wrote:*slightly* off topic here, but IIRC last year in Canada so many teams were afraid of graining due to slipping/sliding that they slapped barn door wings on. And McLaren did that too, plus they had the f-duct so just slammed on massive wings for the added downforce.
I would be surprised not to see a low downforce package from McLaren though.
Cars likely to run at the front of the pack will need low downforce wings to stand a chance of maintaining their lead. Cars in the midfield, not so much (and they might think it is worth the gamble).mep wrote:Will they even need low downforce wings when there are 2 DRS zones on this track?
You can gain from them when you go for medium downforce in corners and still get low drag on the straights.
Oh yeah, sorry.raymondu999 wrote:That was Monza. I'm talking about Canada.Owen.C93 wrote:Except Lewis didn't. Although that may have not been the best decision.raymondu999 wrote:*slightly* off topic here, but IIRC last year in Canada so many teams were afraid of graining due to slipping/sliding that they slapped barn door wings on. And McLaren did that too, plus they had the f-duct so just slammed on massive wings for the added downforce.
I would be surprised not to see a low downforce package from McLaren though.
That's impossiblen smikle wrote:... you can crank up the wings and not face the drag penalty.
They also had verizon since at least Monaco i thinkGiblet wrote:Verizon?
How does that work, with team Vodafone Mclaren Mercedes?
EDIT: Forget it , they own 45% of Verizon and since there is no Vodafone in Canada or the US, it's Verizon.
yep, thats rightalelanza wrote:They also had verizon since at least Monaco i thinkGiblet wrote:Verizon?
How does that work, with team Vodafone Mclaren Mercedes?
EDIT: Forget it , they own 45% of Verizon and since there is no Vodafone in Canada or the US, it's Verizon.
Comparing with cars without U side-pods obviously.alelanza wrote:That's impossiblen smikle wrote:... you can crank up the wings and not face the drag penalty.
DRS use, ends this statementshelly wrote:n_smikle, the graph you posted is relative to an airplane which has to sustain its weight with lift. It can then use lower cl at higher speed, thus reducing induced drag.
So it can not be interpreted for f1 cars: it just does not apply to them, because as you said, their wings are fixed.
Considering that Mclaren tops or is around the top in straight line speed in most section speeds, I would say...compared to ALL F1 cars, yet produces downforce numbers comparable to Red Bull, who BTW doesn't put themselves in the top five for sector speeds hardly ever.Agree that if your bodywork has less drag, you can use that bonus for adding downforce via the wings.
U shaped sidepods have less frontal area, but that does not automatically imply that they are less draggy than conventional shaped sidepods, being Drag= S*c_d.
By the way I agree that they are probably less draggy than ferrari's for example.
Scoop generated lift??? I don't get it, are you talking lift generation from the top of the L shape entrance of the sidepod? Have you forgotten that the entrance is in the wake of the front wheel? And that the venturi effect of the scoop shape will change that..?On interesting aspect is that u sidepods could also produce less lift than a conventional shape, because of the limited low pressure zone on the top leading edge.
Mclaren worked a lot in this zone also last year with "normal" sidepods, introducing that upper slot that ferrari has recently copied (see f150 thread) and that should have the main function of destroying lift generated by the upper part of the sidepod