I think only the nosecone flexes, the wing seems to move more but the flex seems bigger because it's more noticable there. (more lines, pivoting effect etc. optical illusion)Sevach wrote:Honestly it seems like everything is flexing big time, starting from the nose cone itself.
They showed lots of cars over those curbs, none of them flex like that.
I don't think it's due to fixation point of the wing, a lot of teams fixate their wings like that now.
Excatly...they showed lots of cars and none of other car wings flex like that. Flexible wings are not allowed but theres no rule of nose as i know, so flexible nose put wings close to the ground as possible.Sevach wrote:Honestly it seems like everything is flexing big time, starting from the nose cone itself.
They showed lots of cars over those curbs, none of them flex like that.
I don't think it's due to fixation point of the wing, a lot of teams fixate their wings like that now.
This is probably the FIA's idea of 'equalisation', which was all supposed to be about equalising power and working from there. The engines all now seem to be unequal in a lot of areas. Engine homologation is just a joke.shelly wrote:A ferrari insider (user fabioc) has posted on an italian forum (blogf1.it) that one of the elements of rbr performance is a special dispensation from fia which allows renault powerd cars, officially for reliability issues, to move coolant liquid between different reservoirs, thus optimising weight distribution. merc and ferrrari not allowed to do that, even if they have already asked for it.