Ferrari F138

A place to discuss the characteristics of the cars in Formula One, both current as well as historical. Laptimes, driver worshipping and team chatter do not belong here.
tpe
tpe
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Re: Ferrari F138

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Crucial_Xtreme wrote:Ferrari still trying to improve the F138 & help tyres..

http://www.omnicorse.it/img/articoli/ev ... _gomme.jpg
via OmniCorse.it
How? The black "thing" seems more like a film/plastic material.

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diffuser
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Joined: 07 Sep 2012, 13:55
Location: Montreal

Re: Ferrari F138

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tpe wrote:
Crucial_Xtreme wrote:Ferrari still trying to improve the F138 & help tyres..

http://www.omnicorse.it/img/articoli/ev ... _gomme.jpg
via OmniCorse.it
How? The black "thing" seems more like a film/plastic material.

The link says it is a special polymer developed for boating. The artical says it retains heat.... Metals tent to reflect radiation....
The following link http://www.radiantbarrier.com/physics-of-foil.htm states ...

Although two objects may be identical, if the surface of one were covered with a material of 90% emissivity, and the surface of the other with a material of 5% emissivity, the result would be a drastic difference in the rate of radiation flow from these two objects. This is demonstrated by comparison of four identical, equally heated iron radiators covered with different materials. Paint one with aluminum paint and another with ordinary enamel. Cover the third with asbestos and the fourth with aluminum foil. Although all have the same temperature, the one covered with aluminum foil would radiate the least (lowest [5%] emissivity). The radiators covered with ordinary paint or asbestos would radiate most because they have the highest emissivity (even higher than the original iron). Painting over the aluminum paint or foil with ordinary paint changes the surface to 90% emissivity.


So it might just be heat resistant black paint (I doubt it) cause a rim resembles aluminum foil.

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diffuser
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Re: Ferrari F138

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He said somewhere else - maybe SKy - that they couldn't have their models as big as they would like either - I guess 50% rather than 60%.[/quote]


no doubt that the updated Marenello tunnel is better than the old marenello ..my point was there wasn't a big edge (negligible) over the Toyota tunnel which they've used for this year's car.

stefan_
stefan_
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Re: Ferrari F138

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Korea 2013 - Saturday (05.10.2013)

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"...and there, very much in flames, is Jacques Laffite's Ligier. That's obviously a turbo blaze, and of course, Laffite will be able to see that conflagration in his mirrors... he is coolly parking the car somewhere safe." Murray Walker, San Marino 1985

f1universe
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Re: Ferrari F138

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The better work very hard in qualy pace for next year, or they will suffer a lot with Kimi and Alo.

The Pj
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Re: Ferrari F138

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Nice comparison...Alonso Vs Vettel (QP)
http://t.co/x1pac95GeY

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tpe
tpe
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Re: Ferrari F138

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Owen.C93 wrote:
The Pj wrote:Nice comparison...Alonso Vs Vettel (QP)

http://img401.imageshack.us/img401/1603/zev.gif
Which proves the supporters of the "F138 sucks due to the HUGE sidepods" theory, maybe, are correct!

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majki2111
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Re: Ferrari F138

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tpe wrote:
Owen.C93 wrote:
The Pj wrote:Nice comparison...Alonso Vs Vettel (QP)

http://img401.imageshack.us/img401/1603/zev.gif
Which proves the supporters of the "F138 sucks due to the HUGE sidepods" theory, maybe, are correct!
Why do you think so?

321apex
321apex
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Joined: 07 Oct 2013, 16:57

Re: Ferrari F138

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re-Pj
In my view, shorter and sloping down sidepods are quite important here. There is no silver bullet, but careful management of the amount of air passing below rear wing as well as it's Reynolds number in the cross-section is key. In case of Red Bull I sense, their sidepod design minimizes the amount of this air flow.

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turbof1
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Re: Ferrari F138

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tpe wrote:
Owen.C93 wrote:
The Pj wrote:Nice comparison...Alonso Vs Vettel (QP)

http://img401.imageshack.us/img401/1603/zev.gif
Which proves the supporters of the "F138 sucks due to the HUGE sidepods" theory, maybe, are correct!
The red bull sidepods aren't just lower. They are much smaller. That is superior packaging right there.
#AeroFrodo

timbo
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Re: Ferrari F138

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turbof1 wrote:The red bull sidepods aren't just lower. They are much smaller. That is superior packaging right there.
IMO it is impossible to draw any conclusions without knowing the details.
Firstly it can be that Ferrari engine needs more cooling than Renault. Secondly, RedBull uses a different type of cooling arrangement, they have one big exit at the centerline, and it can be that Ferrari actually uses rear wing better. Of course, what RedBull probably loses in that area they more than make up by using ramp-exhaust and throttle maps.

wesley123
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Re: Ferrari F138

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The undercut of the Ferrari's sidepods is so much larger at the rear.
"Bite my shiny metal ass" - Bender

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Alonso Fan
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Re: Ferrari F138

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wesley123 wrote:The undercut of the Ferrari's sidepods is so much larger at the rear.
that's what makes it look so nice, imo

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Gerhard Berger
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Re: Ferrari F138

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timbo wrote:
turbof1 wrote:The red bull sidepods aren't just lower. They are much smaller. That is superior packaging right there.
IMO it is impossible to draw any conclusions without knowing the details.
Firstly it can be that Ferrari engine needs more cooling than Renault. Secondly, RedBull uses a different type of cooling arrangement, they have one big exit at the centerline, and it can be that Ferrari actually uses rear wing better. Of course, what RedBull probably loses in that area they more than make up by using ramp-exhaust and throttle maps.
Also worth noting that Ferrari have the vertical radiators which naturally require a higher sidepod.

321apex
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Re: Ferrari F138

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re:timbo
I would think that concentrating radiator cooling exit below the rear wing (RB) creates a pressure depression effect (which is desirable from downforce perspective). By the looks of it RB is maximizing the potential of rear wing downforce. By detail design, they create such conditions that incident cool air as well as pass thru hot air are carefully controlled as to their flow around distinct elements at the rear of the vehicle.
As far as heat rejection is concerned between Renault and Ferrari engines, you can treat them as comparable in my view. Engine design isn't that varying between marques to leave much waste on the table between them. Efficiency of car design however is a much different story.