one thing I'm suspicious of this nosecone-wing-tmd setup, is that it is relatively difficult and expensive to tune, what I mean is that, it most likely will work only on certain types of kerbs at certain speeds, with a dedicated, adjustable TMD device it is much easier, you can fine tune it whenever, but this nose cone, if I remember the rules correctly from the rules, can contain only structural parts, so the stiffness is as it is from when the part leaves the autoclave, you cannot add any reinforcement or remove anything, because that would require a new crash test be performed on the conebhallg2k wrote: It really seems like Red Bull has figured out a way to use an "elastic" nose to transmit those unsettling forces to the mass of the front wing, which, as it shakes, rattles and rolls, then dampens the effect those forces have on the rest of the car. This is precisely what Renault's tuned mass damper did in 2005-06; it was just hidden from sight within the nose of the car in a package that more closely resembled mass dampers that are commonly found in various other applications.
Incidentally, Renault also had a tuned mass damper mounted on the rear of the R26, or at least they planned to have one. It might be asking too much of the rear wing to do more than just create downforce, but you never know...
thus I would think that this is more of a positive side effect, that might have been anticipated, and turned out to work is some specific circumstances, but not a real baseline feature in the design of the nosecone
a bit more thoughts about the laminate:
using aramid (kevlar) fibers instead of carbon, aramid can bend more easy than the carbon fiber will, but it will not stretch, and if you would want to make something flex like that nose cone without any notable damage to the outside surface, you have to use a resin that will flex when fully cured, there is no real other way, don't compare this to the front wind flexing, or aeroplane wing flex, it's different
also, a part of that shape, even with only 3 layers of 150-200gr/sqm CF fabric, will turn out to be very strong, I wouldn't expect it to get damaged from hitting a styrofoam, not at 100km/h, I've seen factory made carbon fiber side view mirrors on rolled rally cars, where at some point the were scraping on tarmac/dirt/gravel, and still they remain structurally sound, mounting points usually shatter, but the shape remains stiff, even if it has a crack or two, it certainly doesn't turn all rubbery like