Possibly not. Sky did a slo mo of the incident, and it showed that just before the barriers, the car jacked up on the front left. Is is possible that Ferrari are trialling FRIC, as this is the only thing that would cause such a rise?Dyanxx wrote:Apparently it was driver error.kebab wrote:Something went wrong as the car move left and the front locked at the entry of of turn 1.
If they are actually testing it, I highly doubt they would do so in Monacogilgen wrote:Possibly not. Sky did a slo mo of the incident, and it showed that just before the barriers, the car jacked up on the front left. Is is possible that Ferrari are trialling FRIC, as this is the only thing that would cause such a rise?Dyanxx wrote:Apparently it was driver error.kebab wrote:Something went wrong as the car move left and the front locked at the entry of of turn 1.
It wasn't the car. This is from Autosportgilgen wrote:Possibly not. Sky did a slo mo of the incident, and it showed that just before the barriers, the car jacked up on the front left. Is is possible that Ferrari are trialling FRIC, as this is the only thing that would cause such a rise?Dyanxx wrote:Apparently it was driver error.kebab wrote:Something went wrong as the car move left and the front locked at the entry of of turn 1.
Even Anthony Davidson noticed and showed it on Sky, that he was in a lower gear way earlier than in his previous laps. I still don't understand why that would cause both fronts to lock up like that, so the car could have just bottomed out like Massa said. And as for FRIC, Domenicali said that there is no point in testing something that complex in Monaco.Felipe Massa remains perplexed about how his heavy Monaco Grand Prix practice crash unfolded, despite agreeing with Ferrari that it was not a technical problem.
The Brazilian slammed into the barriers at Sainte Devote in final practice.
"When I braked over the bump the car touched the floor and I locked both front wheels," Massa said.
"It's not an easy thing to happen, normally you only lock one.
"And then I went into the wall - waiting for it to arrive was not a nice thing.
"I looked at the data, and honestly, when I braked I was in a gear lower than I was on Thursday. I locked both front tyres and it was very strange that it happened."
Ferrari made a huge effort to repair Massa's car but it ran out of time to get him out in Q1, leaving him 22nd on the grid.
"It is the worst track to have such a problem," Massa admitted, "but I think we need to remain positive and we will have to try everything we can for tomorrow.
"Monaco is difficult to overtake at, we know, but anything can happen."
He confirmed that he had not been injured in the incident.
"I feel a few pains in the muscles in my back, but I'm OK and it's nothing that a massage won't sort out," Massa said.
To get back on the slots thing;amouzouris wrote:I agree with bhal.
Also there are no slots at the rear of the wing, that was my initial thought as well, that its just a different take on that loophole, but as it turns out its not
you might be right but i saw a lot of photos of the rear wing and none had slots..maybe i didn't look at the correct photo!wesley123 wrote:To get back on the slots thing;amouzouris wrote:I agree with bhal.
Also there are no slots at the rear of the wing, that was my initial thought as well, that its just a different take on that loophole, but as it turns out its not
http://f1tcdn.net/gallery/var/resizes/2 ... 5my188.jpg
Image is taken form the F1t gallery.
As you can see, on the left section of the wing close to the end plate, there is a hole. So like said, it is nothing more than creating a 3 plane wing in this 20mm section.
You're right! But then what are they hiding by saying it's driver error?flyboy2160 wrote:Did it seem to anybody else that his right front didn't turn right like the left front just after the lockup? He turns the steering wheel more and more, but it looks to me like the right front doesn't turn at all. Maybe I've had too many beers......
Starts at about 28 seconds in:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1lepdwk9kk
I don't think it's that simple, because there's little reason to create a multi-element section there. The point of multiple elements is to allow for a higher AoA without airflow becoming detached. Irrespective of the fact that the overall AoA of the Ferrari rear wing decreased since last year, this should not be a concern for the area in which the slots are located, because the AoA there is minimal relative to the rest of the wing anyway. (When Ferrari previously ran a multi-element section, it was on the flap and most often integrated with the endplate.)wesley123 wrote:[...]
As you can see, on the left section of the wing close to the end plate, there is a hole. So like said, it is nothing more than creating a 3 plane wing in this 20mm section.
Much like the front wing, to create a less sensitive wing.bhallg2k wrote: I don't think it's that simple, because there's little reason to create a multi-element section there.
Indeed it does, and compared to previous races they run much higher AoA. Not to mention they use(much like every other team) a long chord, high cambered main plane. This wing would be much more sensitive to changes in yaw/airflow than the shorter chord they ran before DRS came in.The point of multiple elements is to allow for a higher AoA without airflow becoming detached.
Imo that doesnt sound logical.In my view, the slots are an optimization of DRS. When the flow profile around the wing changes as DRS is activated, I think airflow through the slot serves to separate flow from the back of the wing in the same way Red Bull "stalled" the tips of the beam wing last year and in much the same way as Lotus' DDRS theoretically "stalls" the center section of the main plane.
I watched the replay and he downshifted after the fronts locked up.Bomber_Pilot wrote:Even Anthony Davidson noticed and showed it on Sky, that he was in a lower gear way earlier than in his previous laps. I still don't understand why that would cause both fronts to lock up like that, so the car could have just bottomed out like Massa said. And as for FRIC, Domenicali said that there is no point in testing something that complex in Monaco.
Yeah, looks like it.flyboy2160 wrote:Did it seem to anybody else that his right front didn't turn right like the left front just after the lockup? He turns the steering wheel more and more, but it looks to me like the right front doesn't turn at all. Maybe I've had too many beers......
Starts at about 28 seconds in:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1lepdwk9kk