No, I suspect the efficiency of the axle systems has improved with better materials, finishing and coatings. Nothing stays the same.Lycoming wrote: Have they reverted to a more conventional design this year?
Brian
No, I suspect the efficiency of the axle systems has improved with better materials, finishing and coatings. Nothing stays the same.Lycoming wrote: Have they reverted to a more conventional design this year?
It could be and is more likely to be an inlet based on what we know so far. I once thought it was an outlet but after seeing the pipes going through the chassis and Gary Anderson's explanation I have to reconsider.quixpeed wrote:
the only reason i qouted your post is that, i think as much as u do, that this DRS hole is an outlet of air and NOT inlet, the whereabouts of the legality is in the hands of charlie for sure, but i was trying to analyze the function of the technology. as i said its all about reducing the effect of air pressure and its frictional impact on the cars body... by terbulating air or reduce its direct flowing pressure around the cars body, starting from the nose going all where is possible. and the only way is by creating vacuum of air areas and channeling pressured air to it.
beside that image previously of the 2 inlet tubes in the front section of the nose, those ducts are not usually placed there?!?!?
As for the bottom of the car details, i remember in one video on youtube of MSC being very defenses towards photographers to take any shots of the cars bottom... like never shoot at all, he seemed very worried.
after all of course its all speculation from everybody's part to figure out what is it exactly the trick of the MGP technology.
ArchAngel wrote:Heck, they need to break out & bolt on the monkey seat for a quick-&-dirty DF boost to help get those rear tyres working properly.
If only it was that simple.
That sounds great. Very promising to hear for a Merc fan. We may be down but we're not out.... Yet.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:@Maelstrom
No rumours, but we can take the educated guess that we will see a far more aggressive exhaust from Mercedes-AMG come the first few rounds of the European season.
May even provide a more stable platform for their tyre issues.
And this year will be all about how Mercedes can develop in season. Expect upgrades.
hardingfv32 wrote:You think? What is with Williams high angle axle design then? Maybe things have changed.Lycoming wrote:Although, having it angled like that does increase transmission losses.
Brian
Agreed on both counts.Raptor22 wrote:...its fixable but they need more data and the first two races places them a disadvantage.
How they fix the problem this season will be determine if Schumacher stays or retires for good.
Ross himself is strongly convinced that the reinforcements to the organization, its resources & systems have now elevated Merc in a much better position than before to pursue in-season developments that will keep the team competitive throughout the season... Although probably not as aggressively and at the same break-neck pace as the "RRA? What RRA?" teams.Maelstrom wrote:With Ross Brawn and the impressive new Merc technical team what are the possibilities that we might see a lot of upgrades planned through the year to allow them to catch up to McLaren?
I think I'm going to stick my head out at this point and say that, while they may be evaluating the benefits of the pseudo-EBD, but that they'll find it's not worth the effort. If the EBDs gave them 0.8s per lap - which I think is a reasonable estimate - and Martin Witmarsh (I think) reckons the efficiency is now to the level of about 25% it's clearly not worth it. I think they can spend that development money much more wisely elsewhere. Tyres come to mind.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:@Maelstrom
No rumours, but we can take the educated guess that we will see a far more aggressive exhaust from Mercedes-AMG come the first few rounds of the European season.
May even provide a more stable platform for their tyre issues.
And this year will be all about how Mercedes can develop in season. Expect upgrades.
If the Redbulls were 1.5-2 seconds faster it doesn't mean it was all down to EBD.RobertPthe3rd wrote:Ebds are still important. Anyway you can get more rear df, means you can have more overall df. And the rb ebd was worth more than .8 I would say closer to 2 seconds so 25% is still .5 huge in f1 that's 10th to 1st at some races
Indeed. Tombazis said the ballpark for performance gain with ebd in 2011 was 2sec in a recent interviewraymondu999 wrote:EBD worth 2 seconds?