Ferrari have been working with the Lotus Renault Reactive Ride Height System since December.Bomber_Pilot wrote:Any thoughts on which the other "front-running" team with a similar device might be?
Ferrari have been working with the Lotus Renault Reactive Ride Height System since December.Bomber_Pilot wrote:Any thoughts on which the other "front-running" team with a similar device might be?
That would render it illegal as it uses driver's movement to trigger pitch attitude change.WhiteBlue wrote:It seems to be pretty simple in essence. When break pressure is applied a part of the oil goes to a small cylinder which elongates the front suspension strut.
Or is it their current rep that they are good for innovation that does not win races? It could be that the system was just a on the car to send others on a wild goose chase. It could have been complete disable during the test. Lotus might have abandon the idea already.N12ck wrote:Talk about Lotus living up to there name and being innovative, this thing is almost like active suspension but only under breaking
No, because the driver pushing the break pedal has a primary legal function. If they just use the original modulation it would be perfectly legal.timbo wrote:That would render it illegal as it uses driver's movement to trigger pitch attitude change.WhiteBlue wrote:It seems to be pretty simple in essence. When break pressure is applied a part of the oil goes to a small cylinder which elongates the front suspension strut.
I don't think the primary function comes into it. Otherwise you would have wings controlled by the throttle.WhiteBlue wrote: No, because the driver pushing the break pedal has a primary legal function. If they just use the original modulation it would be perfectly legal.
Breaking torque is ultimately controlled by the driver pushing a pedal. It is all the same, just a different way to describe it.Tim.Wright wrote:I don't think the primary function comes into it. Otherwise you would have wings controlled by the throttle.WhiteBlue wrote: No, because the driver pushing the break pedal has a primary legal function. If they just use the original modulation it would be perfectly legal.
The fact that its controlled by the braking torque and not the master cylinder pressure means is reacting to the longitudinal dynamics of the chassis, not a driver input directly.
Tim
1) Maybe Lotus viewed it as a little gray too and that is why they sought official approval. Or, it could still be a rejected system. Going to the FIA for approval just adds to the misdirection.Tim.Wright wrote:The fact that its controlled by the braking torque and not the master cylinder pressure means is reacting to the longitudinal dynamics of the chassis, not a driver input directly.
Or more accurately it's a consequence of pushing the pedal and not directly controlled by it. That is where they will argue there is a loophole.WhiteBlue wrote:Breaking torque is ultimately controlled by the driver pushing a pedal. It is all the same, just a different way to describe it.