BreezyRacer wrote:I have to say that I agree with Renault's decision to abandon development, once blown diffusers and forward exit exhaust blowing was banned for next season. I suppose they could have learned by committing to the switch to rear blown diffusers, as they tested during mid season Fridays but it wouldn't surprise me if budget problems led them to rethink a big move like that. It would have likely still left them playing catch up on that front as well, as most other teams had a lot of time in on blown rear diffusers by then.
This illustrates perfectly the risk of going it alone in F1, or any other technical competition. It's pure "hero or zero". Sadly Renault wound up with the zero. If other teams had also pursued forward exit exhausts the joint development that would have taken place may have proved FEE to be superior. However, when you are 1 team fighting a development race against 4 other teams, all going in the same direction of development you have to have one hell of a good idea to just keep up.
Still I'm glad to see Team Renault bring something big, different, and creative to the party. It's made for an interesting technological experiment.
One thing I wonder is what if McLaren and Renault had teamed up their concepts... Consider a car that had U-pods, and the exhaust internally being taken under the U-pods, up the outside of the car, and then out under the end of the L. This could then be pointed inwards and downwards to flow under the car just next to the splitter with some careful sculpting of body work. This would conceivably solve renault's problems with the exhaust simply falling out from under the car at low speeds, as the two flows would be being shoved right in, under the car where the reference and step planes join.