What is being illustrated?
Brian
With the topic title, what HampusA wrote in the post and based on the small vid I think he is just trying to make us laughhardingfv32 wrote:What is being illustrated?
Brian
You did well to see that all I could see was vibrating in sympathy with the bumps in the track. Isn't it the case that a flexing wing comes in to play under braking entry to the bends to give extra down force on the bends and not on the straights?HampusA wrote:The flexing. Focus on the wing at top speed and then watch it rise up considerably as the car slows down.
Not sure if this has been discussed before, but something I don't quite get with running more rake is how they manage to get the tea tray to not hit the ground? Surely with the wing so low down as a result of the increased rake, the tea tray will be more prone to scrape the ground...hardingfv32 wrote:This is strictly an illustration of the rake being used. Make a comparison between the upright and nose and it is clear that the complete nose section is rising in the last photo.
You bias on the subject is fogging you view of the photos.
Brian
I guess i´m alone in seeing the wing actually rise up from the ground just after he hits the brakes until he passes by the camera.richard_leeds wrote:The downforce will change with speed, hence the rake and wing height will change according to speed as the downforce varies.
I'm also with Brian, that video simply shows that the gap looks small in the distant with heat haze. Then the gap looks bigger when the camera zooms into the front wing while the car is close and at a completely different angle.
I'm not disputing that front wings flex, but that video doesn't add anything.