As Ted mentioned in free practice one it is more a square view on the tyres which is better than the solutions other teams use (I don't know those).richard_leeds wrote:There must be a lot of vibration on those cameras on the front wings. I wonder why they didn't mount them on the main bodywork, ie tub/airbox/sidepods?
I thought the same. They really change the conditions for the front tyres by disturbing the normal flow. Although this effect is really small, it changes the situation.marcush. wrote:come to think of it -is it wise to monitor the tyre temp BEFORE the measured field turns into the contact patch?
From my point of view i would love to see whats happening directly after the tread separates from the tracksurface spreading out the heat ,cooling down by the airflow and reentering the track .
It might or might not be aerodynmically more disturbing to intrude into the wake of the front tyre but generally we are made to believe the front wing itself was the all determiningfactor in aero...
any ideas why they chose this area? to complement the rear IR sensors ,maybe?
Well, I guess it depends on what type of heat is measured by the optical sensor? I know very little of those, but do they measure radiated heat or convective heat? Or both?Jersey Tom wrote:Is there the possibility these things are looking at more than just the tire? Like getting a more full on shot of the back of the car, what heat looks like in the wake, anything like that? Seems like the front wing would obstruct most of the view of the tire itself.
I have no idea...now that you mention it.Jersey Tom wrote:Is it optical? Or is it IR? Or is it something else? I'm curious just what kind of camera or sensor it is, to be honest. Looks awfully big.