They change it like any other wing.
I can't remember a person who mounted more new wings last season than Michael Schumacher. So I'dd seem silly if they didn't cover that angle.
The "front wing" stops at the body work just before the suspension systems so if the wing were to become so badly damaged that the impact went upto its mounting points, the mounting points would likely just fail and the wing would crumple and fall off to stop the shock of the impact travelling further along the car.clipsy1H wrote:can anybody tell me 1 thing. if the front wing breaks how they can change it? there is a chance to break the suspension to a minor contact? so thin wing
( i know my english is fail hope you guys understand what i try to say)
I think that's just a shadow from winglets under the front wing, like these from last year Mclaren:f1motta wrote:From Twitter:
@f1talks
A lot of different opinions about what I found yesterday on Mercedes front wing. Here is a better picture i.imgur.com/lfwSJ.jpg #F1
It's not sure whether or not the FW has a separate f-duct, or whether it is the DRS coupled f-duct Marko is tailing about. The AMuS article writes of it as two different systems. The FW f-duct that stabilizes the air flow around the car and the DRS f-duct which is only activated when DRS is activated in order to increase top speed.yener wrote:So the Fduct might be connected to the FW, which means it will bend the FW while DRS is activated and then the car gets a little bit more topspeed.
So it's not always active?
So we have the w-DUCT on the front wing.. it's officially called the "W-Duct" and on DRS activation another Duct on the rear wing?thomin wrote:It's not sure whether or not the FW has a separate f-duct, or whether it is the DRS coupled f-duct Marko is tailing about. The AMuS article writes of it as two different systems. The FW f-duct that stabilizes the air flow around the car and the DRS f-duct which is only activated when DRS is activated in order to increase top speed.yener wrote:So the Fduct might be connected to the FW, which means it will bend the FW while DRS is activated and then the car gets a little bit more topspeed.
So it's not always active?
Marko only speaks about the DRS f-duct.
So I guess that the mysterious FW f-duct is NOT coupled with DRS.
I also can't imagine something blowing on the rearwing.Pup wrote:The rear wing f-duct is certainly something new - I don't see how you could blow the wing at all with the current regs, actively or not.
merko is just taking attention off the redbullGanxxta wrote:I also can't imagine something blowing on the rearwing.Pup wrote:The rear wing f-duct is certainly something new - I don't see how you could blow the wing at all with the current regs, actively or not.
According to Marko its activated with the DRS, so one thing what I can imagine is when the top flap opens it somehow creates a stalling effect on the lower flap...
Remember last years flow attachment issues they had, maybe they learned something from it.
So nowadays everything which involves stalling is an F-Duct?
I really don't think so. I don't think he would make such claims if he wasn't convinced they're true. He said that Mercedes has a DRS triggered F-duct and that Red Bull is already working on it. There are really no two ways about interpreting that.snoop1050 wrote: merko is just taking attention off the redbull