Yeah it's the reflection. I'll be damned if it doesn't look like one from that angle though. My apologies.Owen.C93 wrote:If you were wondering what the yellow stripe is it's a refection from the roll hoop that hangs over it.
Hey maybe all the car's body work is porous and it's one big duct.
Your sure that's a vent and not a cataract in your eye? lolCrucial_Xtreme wrote:New air intake on the RB8 I haven't seen mentioned. They even went so far as to cover it up. Right click>view image
Hiding/different bodywork
Open vent
Open vent 2
+1. I'm not sure why all the conspiracy theories on ducted flow to the front wing, or to the diffuser, or to the splitter. Makes no sense. Driver cooling used to be at the tip of the nose. They moved it back to the hump. Why is that so hard to believe?ringo wrote:there is tremendous amount of energy in the splitter area. It does not need any assistance from a constricted duct with a lot of bends in it to assist it.
Flow through that duct will be slower than the freestream under the splitter.
Ducting air to places of higher energy isn't really helpful.
You have to think of low energy areas, which are usual leeward surfaces or regions, before you assign ducted air to an area. The fact of the matter is air moving through a duct loses a lot of energy due to friction and direction changes. The longer the duct the more energy and pressure loss.
Ouside of cooling purposes i dont think a duct in the nose going to anywhere at the front of the car will be of any use. The duct is too small, cramped and long.
I am not going to argue that the slot is not needed for some aero reason, but its first priority is not driver cooling. The strength of the front bulk head is compromised with a hole this close to its top surface. This strength can be reclaimed, but it is going to add weight. If driver cooling is the only goal it is much simpler to use the nose tip hole and the void normally found in the center of the front bulkhead.volarchico wrote: Makes no sense. Driver cooling used to be at the tip of the nose. They moved it back to the hump. Why is that so hard to believe?
I don't see a problem with strength. If you cut away 1" from the top of the "O" shaped bulkhead, just add 1" to the bottom (inside) edge of the top of the "O".hardingfv32 wrote:I am not going to argue that the slot is not needed for some aero reason, but its first priority is not driver cooling. The strength of the front bulk head is compromised with a hole this close to its top surface. This strength can be reclaimed, but it is going to add weight. If driver cooling is the only goal it is much simpler to use the nose tip hole and the void normally found in the center of the front bulkhead.volarchico wrote: Makes no sense. Driver cooling used to be at the tip of the nose. They moved it back to the hump. Why is that so hard to believe?
Brian
I guess we'll see with the first nose change picture. I don't have a good grasp on the load path through that particular bulkhead, but it had to have had an opening in the past for driver cooling coming all the way from the nose, so why would it be so difficult to relocate that gap towards the top of the bulkhead?hardingfv32 wrote:I am not going to argue that the slot is not needed for some aero reason, but its first priority is not driver cooling. The strength of the front bulk head is compromised with a hole this close to its top surface. This strength can be reclaimed, but it is going to add weight. If driver cooling is the only goal it is much simpler to use the nose tip hole and the void normally found in the center of the front bulkhead.volarchico wrote: Makes no sense. Driver cooling used to be at the tip of the nose. They moved it back to the hump. Why is that so hard to believe?
Brian
You're overlooking the fact that the nose is now smaller in terms of volume yet will need to contain the same amount of material in order to pass the crash tests. It's entirely possible that the team can no longer run with a nose tip cooling hole as they do not have room in the construction. The Williams walrus nose did not have a cooling hole, nor do the other really thin noses like the Ferrari F2012.volarchico wrote:I guess we'll see with the first nose change picture. I don't have a good grasp on the load path through that particular bulkhead, but it had to have had an opening in the past for driver cooling coming all the way from the nose, so why would it be so difficult to relocate that gap towards the top of the bulkhead?hardingfv32 wrote:I am not going to argue that the slot is not needed for some aero reason, but its first priority is not driver cooling. The strength of the front bulk head is compromised with a hole this close to its top surface. This strength can be reclaimed, but it is going to add weight. If driver cooling is the only goal it is much simpler to use the nose tip hole and the void normally found in the center of the front bulkhead.volarchico wrote: Makes no sense. Driver cooling used to be at the tip of the nose. They moved it back to the hump. Why is that so hard to believe?
Brian
Are you claiming the nose is a solid structure?myurr wrote: It's entirely possible that the team can no longer run with a nose tip cooling hole as they do not have room in the construction.
It is not difficult, just not the optimum design for maximum chassis strength with the lowest possible weight. If this design is some kind of aero benefit then maybe it is worth the compromise. Driver cooling is not a valid reason for such a compromise. Ducting for driver cooling is far from a universal option in F1 car design.volarchico wrote:so why would it be so difficult to relocate that gap towards the top of the bulkhead?
That's like saying a steel pipe with its end covered with a plastic bag is going to be compromised if you poke a hole in the plastic bag. The tub strength is mostly in the walls, just look back to the pit garage images with all the brake fluid reservoirs electrons steering rack etc. tucked up in the hole in the tub.hardingfv32 wrote:I am not going to argue that the slot is not needed for some aero reason, but its first priority is not driver cooling. The strength of the front bulk head is compromised with a hole this close to its top surface. This strength can be reclaimed, but it is going to add weight. If driver cooling is the only goal it is much simpler to use the nose tip hole and the void normally found in the center of the front bulkhead.volarchico wrote: Makes no sense. Driver cooling used to be at the tip of the nose. They moved it back to the hump. Why is that so hard to believe?
Brian
Not even close to being a valid example.ringo wrote:That's like saying a steel pipe with its end covered with a plastic bag is going to be compromised if you poke a hole in the plastic bag. The tub strength is mostly in the walls, just look back to the pit garage images with all the brake fluid reservoirs electrons steering rack etc. tucked up in the hole in the tub.