Bahrain 2013 - Thyudsday (18.04.2013)
I think it's just a marble from a car that got doubled by alonso, that shot through the flap. If they get shot away by pressure between the tarmac and the rear tyre, they act like rubber bullets.Jackles-UK wrote:In fact the entire element there looks a bit worse-for-wear! Is it safe to assume that the only thing realistically that could have enough velocity to have done the damage is a sizeable chunk of his own front tyre? He was out front/in clean air for the majority of the race and free-standing marbles surely couldn't have had the energy to splinter it like that (although admittedly the black streaks below obviously indicate the presence of them in that area)? I'm all for tyre deg making the racing closer and more exciting but when they start destroying bit of the cars (Hamilton in MAL, Alonso this week) of their own accord I think it's time for Pirelli to take a look at things!Crucial_Xtreme wrote:The FW was definitely broke, I'm just not sure exactly when it broke during the race but it was definitely broke on the last lap at least. In the pic below you can tell it's not a lump of rubber and that it's a break.
The pic above also shows the melted tyre-marble mess formed around the exhaust plume. Does anyone know if that area of the floor is treated specifically with any kind of additional heat treatment from the rest of the floor to stop it from becoming weakened by the heat? I presume the entire floor wouldn't be heat sealed due to weight/cost issues but there must be some serious temperatures going on down there!
Out of thread theme but related to flying marbles. Hamilton on BBC interview before race was saying that a flying marble hit his hand during practice or qualifying, don't remember and the pain was so high that though that has broken his fingers.turbof1 wrote:I think it's just a marble from a car that got doubled by alonso, that shot through the flap. If they get shot away by pressure between the tarmac and the rear tyre, they act like rubber bullets.Jackles-UK wrote:In fact the entire element there looks a bit worse-for-wear! Is it safe to assume that the only thing realistically that could have enough velocity to have done the damage is a sizeable chunk of his own front tyre? He was out front/in clean air for the majority of the race and free-standing marbles surely couldn't have had the energy to splinter it like that (although admittedly the black streaks below obviously indicate the presence of them in that area)? I'm all for tyre deg making the racing closer and more exciting but when they start destroying bit of the cars (Hamilton in MAL, Alonso this week) of their own accord I think it's time for Pirelli to take a look at things!Crucial_Xtreme wrote:The FW was definitely broke, I'm just not sure exactly when it broke during the race but it was definitely broke on the last lap at least. In the pic below you can tell it's not a lump of rubber and that it's a break.
The pic above also shows the melted tyre-marble mess formed around the exhaust plume. Does anyone know if that area of the floor is treated specifically with any kind of additional heat treatment from the rest of the floor to stop it from becoming weakened by the heat? I presume the entire floor wouldn't be heat sealed due to weight/cost issues but there must be some serious temperatures going on down there!
turbof1 wrote:On the hand? Ouch yes that has to be painful. Reasoning that the marbles trajectory was already bending downwards to get inside the cockpit in order to hit the hand, its speed must have been already quite dimished. At full speed it would not be impossible to break the hand. Drivers get them more often on the helmet, which fortunaly can take such blows with ease.
Marca was reporting big updates before Spain as Ferrari are happy with the car and now they want to accelerate the developmentCrucial_Xtreme wrote:Gary Anderson analysis of the F138's China updates.
http://imageshack.us/a/img17/2125/imageeta.jpg
Via AutoSport
Edit: Fernando says there are new parts/updates for Bahrain, Spain & Monaco.
Well its not identical, look at the top of the exhaust ramp. For Bahrain there is a bracket that ties the ramp to the exhaust header. In Sepang the ramp was not connected to the exhaust header.Consider&Go wrote:I think it's identical.
Okay, fair enough. But I don't think it will be adding anything to the car performance wise. Probably just helping the structure of the exhaust system.f300v10 wrote:Well its not identical, look at the top of the exhaust ramp. For Bahrain there is a bracket that ties the ramp to the exhaust header. In Sepang the ramp was not connected to the exhaust header.Consider&Go wrote:I think it's identical.