Spencifer_Murphy wrote:Toyota baffle me...the largest car manufactuer in the world and they produce a car that uses a zero-keel set up whilst retaining the single keel....isnt that TOTALLY DEFYING THE PIONT of a zero keel?!?!?!
tbh I'm suprised it took so long to remove the keel with the TF106B...why did it have to wait until the B-Spec? It shouldn't have been there in the first place!
What I have read about this (Autosport and I hope I get it right
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The keel remained because Bridgstone tyres were imposed on the race team at the last minute - a commercial decision, not a racing one. This did not leave enough time to re-develop the geometry of the front suspension and get a new chassis made in time for the first races. The front of the car has some serious knock-on right down the car, so rushing through this part was not an option. As a result of this, the suspension does not have the proper camber adjustment required by the Bridgestone tyres.
Something else interesting in Autosport (I think connected with the Bridgstone decision), they had to run last year's gearbox. This was shorter than they wanted as it accomodated the longer V10 engine. This means that the bodywork at the rear of the car wasn't optimised to suit the shorter engine.
Hopefully these things will have been addressed with the "B"
Autosport suggest that although the race team is mainly autonomous, there have been certain "hard point" decisions imposed by head office. Tyres being one of them - changing to Bridgestone may not have been a bad choice in itself; but doing it when this years car was geared to Michelins was.........
Also, suggestion that this interfering was one reason MG went; an example given was that he wanted to chase raw downforce to keep this early season car more or less on pace; head office said "no".