gold333 wrote:Do you realise it is in the interest of (almost) all teams to increase underbody airflow? Since F1 cars run a stepped and not flat bottom -> therefore high noses, since 1995. With this regulation I think it will be the exception that a team has a 2012 McLaren nose.
Most will simply try to increase underbody flow, therefore raise the tub height to the maximum and live with the grotesque nose design at the point the nose has to be no higher than a certain height (550mm).
I was talking about existing cars. Most of the teams already had it raised to max height for years, one of them was Ferrari. Unlike them, Mclaren lowered the chassis and the nose last year, scoring 122 more points than Ferrari, and maintained design trend for 2012.
So teams won't be trying to raise it relative to their 2011 chassis, especially given to 2012 regulations, because that is illogical. Those who can afford it and had enough time, will follow what Mclaren did last year - slightly lover the chassis in order to have undisturbed airflow on top.
The amount of air that reaches floor doesn't depend mainly on height of the nose and chassis. If having chassis and nose as high as possible is the only way to have a competitive car, than Brawn GP with one of the lowest chassis and nose in the previous years could never scored a point, hardly become a top car.
Ferrari's explanation about how lego nose doesn't influence negatively the flow is bs. If having nose shaped like that has benefits as they say, than they must have been extremely shortsighted not to apply it years ago.