Highly doubtful.alogoc wrote:quote:
Alex @ AMorteF
Ferrari could test on Friday with a slight forward tilt of the engine as they did during the 2010 season
It would be much easier to do thru change to suspension geometry. Moreso, you can't get softer ride without change of rear rideheight, otherwise you'd be scraping the track, so it is pointless anyway,amouzouris wrote:i can think of something this would benefit though....as we discussed extensively in this thread...the f2012 was designed with a lot of rake in mind...BUT while today they are running with a bit of rake...it is not the amount we saw in jerez....in addition as bhallg2k said some months ago....and i agreed with him...is that one of the problems the car had with traction came from not being able to run as much rake and the car was really stiff at the rear...so by tilting the engine a bit forward...they will bring the suspension upwards but not the diffuser...so they will run as much rake to the floor and diffuser as they can by sealing the diffuser but the suspension will be higher allowing them to run it as it was suppose to from the beginning and gain some rear traction from it..
well i have to disagree...with pullrods there is less adjustability and it might be harder to adjust the geometry...also the suspension was designed as we said with higher right height at the rear....lowering it that much meant that they had to stiffen it up so that it wouldn't bottom out continually....bringing the rear suspension up will allow them to run it softer as it was intended to because it won't bottom out that easily...timbo wrote:It would be much easier to do thru change to suspension geometry. Moreso, you can't get softer ride without change of rear rideheight, otherwise you'd be scraping the track, so it is pointless anyway,amouzouris wrote:i can think of something this would benefit though....as we discussed extensively in this thread...the f2012 was designed with a lot of rake in mind...BUT while today they are running with a bit of rake...it is not the amount we saw in jerez....in addition as bhallg2k said some months ago....and i agreed with him...is that one of the problems the car had with traction came from not being able to run as much rake and the car was really stiff at the rear...so by tilting the engine a bit forward...they will bring the suspension upwards but not the diffuser...so they will run as much rake to the floor and diffuser as they can by sealing the diffuser but the suspension will be higher allowing them to run it as it was suppose to from the beginning and gain some rear traction from it..
The rideheight is the gap between floor and the track. If the floor in the same position relative to track, than tilting does nothing to ride.amouzouris wrote:in addition you probably didnt read my whole post...i said that the ride height would be adjusted by tilting the engine forward...it will bring the gearbox upwards and the suspension which is attached to it...
Does not make sense if the floor in the same position.amouzouris wrote:lowering it that much meant that they had to stiffen it up so that it wouldn't bottom out continually....bringing the rear suspension up will allow them to run it softer as it was intended to because it won't bottom out that easily...
Completelly agree. To do something like this mid season IMO would just be a waste of human resources and budget. Plus, as we have seen thus far this season, the car in its foundation isn't that bad, it's quite good actually, so why not develop it further without such major changes, that would require for half of the car to be changed.Crabbia wrote:Wouldnt it make more sense for them to address the original design flaws so they can run the rake they initially designed for? and it also seems that they are so close as they have been running more and more rake, or seemingly so, from monaco onwards.
if they believed in the concept of a high rake car and the benefits it would bring why would they bail on that concept at the point in the season that they seem to be getting so close to it?
source? also... it might not be that hard to tilt the engine after all...alogoc wrote:Apperantly it was tested in Idiada by Marc Gene!
Could it be that the car was originaly designed whit an option to tilt the engine?
Having higher ridehide alone is of no benefit for traction, what you want is bigger suspension travel. Having the floor in the same position wouldn't allow for that. So no point.amouzouris wrote:well...it does...since the suspension will be brought upwards the ride height of the suspension will change but not the one of the floor...cs u want the floor lower for the diffuser to work with the current exhaust design that doesn't let u run as much rake... read what ive said again and u will understand what im on about...