Tommy Cookers wrote:Crucial_Xtreme wrote:zyphro wrote:
Uhh.. check your definition of a "good car".
A "good car" around Monaco is one with exceptional mechanical grip and setup with the Pirelli's.
Downforce isn't a great dominator, Monaco is a low DF track.
Wrong. Monaco is a high downforce track. Monza is a low downforce track. And DF is a large part of what the car needs at Monaco. High DF & good mechanical grip.
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Monaco is a LOW Downforce track, because it is slow
(DF depends on the lift coefficient/wing angle and the SQUARE of the speed, so if the speed is slow the wings are set to the steepest angle/max coefficient to get the most DF available at this slow speed)
Monza is a high downforce track. Although the wings are set to a low coefficient/shallow angle, the speed is so great that the DF is higher than Monaco's. That's why low tyre pressures are a problem. The DF is so high that any more would be a problem.
Please explain this to Martin Brundle BSc, James Allen BSc and others !
When they say high downforce they mean high lift(&drag) coefficient, not high downforce.
James Allison, Lotus technical director
“We’ve got a bigger rear wing as you need
more downforce at Monaco than you need anywhere else
Link
Here's
James Allen site specifically calling Singapore a "high downforce" track.
The most stark illustration of this is the front wing. If you compare their front wing for the
low downforce Monza circuit and for the
high downforce Singapore circuit
Link
Mark Smith, Caterham technical director
We all use
high downforce settings, and we have a specific aero configuration we will use in Monaco and probably Hungary, but the days of cars sprouting all sorts of special wings just for Monaco are behind us. The cars may not look hugely different to how they appeared in Spain, but we do have as
much downforce as we can find for the whole weekend in Monte Carlo.
Link
Aerodynamics
Monaco demands the highest downforce levels of the season. Contrary to popular belief, the primary benefit does not come in the corners, as many of them are taken at such low speeds that mechanical grip is of greater importance. Rather, the gains from high downforce come under braking and acceleration, keeping the car stable into the corners and ensuring optimum traction on the exit.
Official F1 Site Monaco Track Guide
I understand what you're saying, but Monaco is a high downforce track. Meaning the cars need high/lots of downforce. Monza is a low downforce track as they use smaller wings etc to make less DF.
The fact is Zyphro said DF isn't a "dominator" in Monaco when it absolutely is. It's much needed.