3.10.1 There must be no bodywork more than 150mm behind the rear wheel centre line which lies
between 75mm and 355mm from the car centre line and between 150mm and 750mm above
the reference plane.
Nah, that wasn't me. That was bhallg2k Technology.WhiteBlue wrote:It turns out bhallg2k was wrong. Mr. Benson obviously knew what he was talking about, at least on those points we have verified so far.
Instead of 65mm the previous draft was like 2012 at 50mm. This means that the lower RW element is now flatter and the upper RW element (the one that is DRSable) has now a larger chord to make most of the downforce....And coincidently the rule of using the DRS only when allowed have disappeared! It may mean that the DRS will be now use free not on/off anymore.Furthermore, the distance between adjacent sections at any longitudinal vertical plane must
lie between 10mm and 15mm at their closest position, except, in accordance with Article 3.18,
when this distance must lie between 10mm and 65mm.
The use of drs is a sporting regulation, not a technical one. You have to look at the corresponding pdf for that one.Ogami musashi wrote:3.10.1 stipulates the shallower rear wing as well as banning of beam wing.
But there's a potential big change from the previous draft:
Instead of 65mm the previous draft was like 2012 at 50mm. This means that the lower RW element is now flatter and the upper RW element (the one that is DRSable) has now a larger chord to make most of the downforce....And coincidently the rule of using the DRS only when allowed have disappeared! It may mean that the DRS will be now use free not on/off anymore.Furthermore, the distance between adjacent sections at any longitudinal vertical plane must
lie between 10mm and 15mm at their closest position, except, in accordance with Article 3.18,
when this distance must lie between 10mm and 65mm.
I cannot find anything in the regulations stating that you´re only allowed to use 100kg of fuel for a race.FrukostScones wrote:Only 100Kg Fuel allowed, so small tanks won't allow any in season power hike (unless they bring back refueling).
The difference is the DRS-activation.Furthermore, the distance between adjacent sections at any longitudinal vertical plane must
lie between 10mm and 15mm at their closest position, except, in accordance with Article 3.18,
when this distance must lie between 10mm and 65mm.
27.8 gm/sec is 100 kg/hr if the engine is on 100% torque demand (and 10500 rpm or more) for every second of that hourmatt21 wrote:I cannot find anything in the regulations stating that you´re only allowed to use 100kg of fuel for a race.FrukostScones wrote:Only 100Kg Fuel allowed, so small tanks won't allow any in season power hike (unless they bring back refueling).
The maximum fuel flow is restricted to 100kg/hr. So in an typical 80 min race you can burn 133kg.
You're right with the maximum fuel rate of 100kg/h, but your estimation of consume per race is to simple.matt21 wrote:I cannot find anything in the regulations stating that you´re only allowed to use 100kg of fuel for a race.
The maximum fuel flow is restricted to 100kg/hr. So in an typical 80 min race you can burn 133kg.
the FIA's aero rules have since the 1967 ban on moveable aero devices promoted inefficient (high drag) downforceOgami musashi wrote:3.10.1 stipulates the shallower rear wing as well as banning of beam wing.
This means that the lower RW element is now flatter and the upper RW element (the one that is DRSable) has now a larger chord to make most of the downforce....And coincidently the rule of using the DRS only when allowed have disappeared! It may mean that the DRS will be now use free not on/off anymore.
Hamilton alone can pull half a second extra out the car alone that's without Mercedes plowing millions into the new engine and the complete overhaul of the aero ill think he will just fine.bhallg2k wrote:I don't think there was really any incentive for change. This past season was apparently the most popular one in ages, which presumably means most fans need only DRS and silly putty tires to be completely entertained. Why spend more to make the smaller "F1T contingent" happy when the sport is quite healthy both critically and financially as it is?
At any rate, I guess this removes most doubt as to whether or not the V6 will be introduced as planned.
EDIT:I'd totally forgotten about that one. I bet he's livid.Red Schneider wrote:So... Lewis Hamilton doing a happy dance?
turbof1 wrote: The use of drs is a sporting regulation, not a technical one. You have to look at the corresponding pdf for that one.
No. The physical point of rotation is the same as now, the volume is fixed and the relative dimension of lower RW element to upper RW element as well as their minimum radius are fixed and the same than in both previous 2014 draft and current regs.matt21 wrote:
The difference is the DRS-activation.