- I'll stand by my downshift without braking comment.manchild wrote:What you wrote about downshifting without braking wasn't any good too
Ferrari was the only team in 2006 questioned by the rest of the teams when it matters flexibilty.
Story that all teams use flexing wings was launched by Ross Brawn and becked up by no one else. It was just poor attempt from Ferrari to justify themseves by saying "we're legal because all others are illegal just like us".
What Ferrari does is not bedning ruels but pure cheating and they get away with it only because of nepotism from FIA. Colin Chapman was bending rules but never got close to cheating so I'm sure if he was alive now he'd work for any F1 team but Ferrari
A friend (who might have an inside line on it) says they have the wing natural frequency tuned to the frequency of the vortex shedding from the wing itself.scarbs wrote:It would appear ferraris solution is to make the the wing deflect in a non linear fashion, so that it only deflects at much higher speeds.
Suddenly this thread takes an interesting turnDaveKillens wrote:In archery, the compound bow gives less resistance the further it is pulled back. For instance, when you make the initial pull, it may be 100 pounds. But near the farthest pull, the tension may be just 25 pounds. So it is possible to engineer in a decreasing rate of tension. I don't even know what Ferrari is doing, but it is probably possible to engineer a wing to flex and move in a manner that decreases resistance as more load is applied. If they can do this while staying inside the FIA inspection procedures, then I have to say, well done, good engineering.
I mean resonance in the wing (structural resonance), not aerodynamic.zac510 wrote:Kilcoo, if resonance occured would the wing need to actually deflect? or would the basic l:d efficiency change in a non-linear fashion?