I thought the same thing initially, but the sidepod is much tighter up top compared to how the Mclaren started last year. I think they may get more air flow to the exhaust now because nothing is there. The vortex off the flow conditioner wing goes straight to the exhaust, it doesn't have to travel along a sidepod. It's interesting to see this because last year's car had a very nice flowing ramp to the exhaust.Ferraripilot wrote:The step in laminar flow from the sidepod top to the exhaust system concerns me. Mclaren started their system somewhat like this last year but ultimately found as we can see with late 27 and now 28 that the transition of flow to the exhaust is about seemless ie. no step. It can also clearly be seen in the new Ferrari that the flow transition to the exhaust is minus any brakes.
The new Sauber's sidepods opted for what is essentially no undercut around the sidepods/floor area which causes that area to be slightly larger, and this packaging is probably why they could not further tighten the sidepod transition to the exhaust. I actually believe the exhaust almost looks like an afterthought with the way everything else around it is designed.
Sharp looking car otherwise.
Morris from Sauber wrote:"Checo had quite a bad accident in Monaco a few years ago and when we got the car back and we saw the sidepod all squashed in, we thought 'I wonder if we could do that?'"
"The sidepods are a bold move, a bold design, but we are pretty confident.
"One of the huge challenges for us is in packaging all of the radiators and boxes. Like most things in Switzerland, we got it just in time!"
"We have a whole new braking system that we were developing last year," said Morris.
"In terms of the chassis, this is an area we've spent a lot of time and effort on to save weight. We've made some savings without compromising safety.
"The exhaust is not massively different to what we finished with last year, we just further enhanced it.
"The front wing is predominantly a carry-over from last year.
"One of the small regulation changes is an additional legality check on the front wing, so we've had to spend a lot of time changing the structure of the wing to be sure we pass that.
"That's something we spent a lot of time over the winter developing."
"Passive DRS is allowed, so this is an area that we're looking at developing through the course of winter testing," he said.
I would be extremly impressed if this was the case so im sure it´s not. Other teams would have done the same if it was possible without compromise. It hink it´s just a diffrent way of distributing the components and they have placed more lower down.dren wrote:The sidepods join the floor where others have an undercut. The top part is squished in so tight that it does away with the undercut.
Yeah that's insane how slim they've made them when you use the sidepod vanes to compare to other cars.PhantomPoster wrote:Blackout wrote:
A comparison (angles can be misleading)
[img]http://i16.servimg.com/u/f16/14/79/55/2 ... 10.jpg[img]
Especially impressive considering the C32 shot there is more zoomed in. Just comparing the gaps to those sideburn turning vanes shows how drastic this is.
Not instead of, as well asSevach wrote:Instead of undercut Sauber has an "overcut" very cool idea.