Cooling reservoir?, as it is at the edge of the radiator.n smikle wrote:what is that weird looking tank that the tubes are going into? It is made of titanium and carbon fibre...
No race car wing will produce lift. It creates drag just like DF does, so a neutral angle maybe, but definitely no lift. Indycars at Indy run wings at -10 degrees and still create DF rather than lift because the wings are cambered.RB7ate9 wrote:In the picture it is hard to tell, but the black band at the trailing edge of the main plane reminds me of a gurney flap. I don't recall if such a thing is a allowed, or even advised as it would disrupt flow through to the upper plane.raymondu999 wrote:Is their main plane almost designed to generate lift when DRS is activated? Looks from that angel as if the trailing edge is some bit lower than the leading edge.
Edit: After much closer inspection of the angle between the trailing edge and the centerline strake, that black band is just livery. No gurney flap.
Purely etymological lift is always a force upwards, but owing to symmetries the aerodynamic mechanisms are the same upside down so lift can be negative (i.e. downforce).Pierce89 wrote:No race car wing will produce lift. It creates drag just like DF does, so a neutral angle maybe, but definitely no lift. Indycars at Indy run wings at -10 degrees and still create DF rather than lift because the wings are cambered.RB7ate9 wrote:In the picture it is hard to tell, but the black band at the trailing edge of the main plane reminds me of a gurney flap. I don't recall if such a thing is a allowed, or even advised as it would disrupt flow through to the upper plane.raymondu999 wrote:Is their main plane almost designed to generate lift when DRS is activated? Looks from that angel as if the trailing edge is some bit lower than the leading edge.
Edit: After much closer inspection of the angle between the trailing edge and the centerline strake, that black band is just livery. No gurney flap.