Belgium 2013 - Thursday (22.08.2013)
I am not an aerodynamic expert, but I think that is to shorten the distance that air has to pass over the wing in comparison to the distance that it has to pass under the wing to create larger pressure difference and thus produce more downforceJDC123 wrote:why do some teams have such a curved leading edge on their rear wing. is it to get more air on the underside of the wing. just wanted to know as this year ferrari have had the biggest curved edge consistently no matter what track.
Well its a commonly held misconception that lift is due to the difference in the path travelled because the fluid parcels have to reach the trailing edge at the same time. Infact any flow visualisation would show that this is not so. One way to look at lift is to think of it as due to a circulation, or crudely, a change in direction of air with air trying to resist it thus generating lift (read on kutta condition and kutta jukowski theorem to know more on this).Cuky wrote:I am not an aerodynamic expert, but I think that is to shorten the distance that air has to pass over the wing in comparison to the distance that it has to pass under the wing to create larger pressure difference and thus produce more downforceJDC123 wrote:why do some teams have such a curved leading edge on their rear wing. is it to get more air on the underside of the wing. just wanted to know as this year ferrari have had the biggest curved edge consistently no matter what track.
SPAturbof1 wrote:I believ it isn't new; if I am correct they already have used those earlier in the season. Ferrari does switch constantly brake disks from race to race.Kiril Varbanov wrote:Totally new design of the brake discs - the wholes are three together, as opposed to the usual 4 or 5 rows of small circles.
Edit: they are the same ones from the british grand prix.
diffuser wrote: SPA
http://i.imgur.com/YL14Xru.jpg
GERMANY
http://www.omnicorse.it/img/articoli/ev ... fiaggi.jpg
SILVERSTONE(2 pics)
http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/Fer ... 9ju557.jpg
If I remember correctly what's important about these brakes is the slot that goes around the whole brake, it allows the air heated by the brakes to warm the tires.
From what I remember, it didn't have enough of a warming effect.
That was an in lap...radosav wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yPOISe-R ... ata_player
Car looks good here!
he was pushing it in S2 very hard. maybe they tried to adjust setup more for S2, Alonso was very fast in S2 at FP1.Tim.Wright wrote:That was an in lap...radosav wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yPOISe-R ... ata_player
Car looks good here!
Just out of interrest, why would you push on an in-lap? I am no engineer or anything, but that just seems like the stupidest thing you can do.radosav wrote:he was pushing it in S2 very hard. maybe they tried to adjust setup more for S2, Alonso was very fast in S2 at FP1.Tim.Wright wrote:That was an in lap...radosav wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yPOISe-R ... ata_player
Car looks good here!
tpe wrote:So, besides the low downforce RW, did you spot ANY other difference? And I am not talking about the brakes. From the pictures I saw, I could not understand if they bring to Spa any update or not.