gilgen wrote:turbof1 wrote:He is atleast trying; I find it more useful then the 2 posts above me.
I suggest that you read the rules about disposable ballast! And also explain how on a hot dry day, or even a wet day, you would want to, or even be able to extract moisture from the air, without some form of refrigeration unit.
And its not even April 1st!
You are missing the point. He tried for a serious post, while you 2 actually were not; whether or not it is something realistic, was not the point.
Anyway, based on Scarbs post I think it is like this:
The hole is not a duct, but the same principle Red Bull used last year on their stepped nose, upside down:
http://scarbsf1.com/blog1/2012/02/24/la ... -bull-rb8/
The letterbox back then was for creating a circulating airflow cylindre. It smoothened out the abrupt rise for the airflow so that it keeps attached.
What does that have to do with Ferrari? Well, they basicilly sought a way to get more space underneath the nose so a higher volume air could pass underneath. The problem was that last year they were already at the maximum: the top of the bulkhead was at 625mm, the top of the nose at 550mm. Further raising it is not possible. However, as the nose has no regulated dimensions, they could remove volume from the underside of it. This though left them with the same problem as with Red Bull: due the abrupt change in height the airflow gets dettached. Because this is at the underside of the nose, a critical area to condition the air to the floor, they had to find a way to smoothen the airflow back out. Hence the Red Bull solution.
I made a sketch (please forgive that it is highly rudimentary):
Orange is the part they removed compared to last year and the area they have won for more air volume, green is the vanity panel they added this year, and red is the letterbox with the circulating flow. Dark blue represents the flow when the hole would be closed, light blue the flow when it is open and doing what it is designed to do.
If we look at a comparison between last year's car and the current, it looks like that that is the case:
http://img1.auto-motor-und-sport.de/Fer ... 658325.jpg