Is it April the first already?Spacepace wrote:I have a theory on the flexi floor of the red bull. Could it be that when the driver sits in the car the weight of him engages some kind of mechanism that is attached to the rod at the front of the floor to pull up.
I'm sure they could have made it narrower by making it taller - indeed it would be much better if it were taller as that would increase the lever arm resisting the turning moment created by the upper rear wing. But making the support taller would also impede flow to the centre section of the beam wing (where the flap is). It looks like the cooling hole from the rear of the airbox cover is pointed towards the flapped section of beam wing so maybe they've found a small benefit by having a wider but short support for the beam wing that helps direct air in to the flap gap on the centre portion of the beam wing.trinidefender wrote: I looks like it is a good 6" wide. A support purely of carbon fibre laminate wouldn't have to be that thick or even close to that. Are there any other pictures of this piece at a different angle.
Sadly not. The driver has to be very firmly strapped in - any vertical play in the seat would be disconcerting for the driver and possibly dangerous in an accident. The seat has to meet certain extraction requirements in the event of an accident and a mechanism would affect this too. Also, this would be in breach of the rules regarding lack of flexibility. Any such system would be fairly obvious to the stewards when scrutineering the car.Spacepace wrote:I have a theory on the flexi floor of the red bull. Could it be that when the driver sits in the car the weight of him engages some kind of mechanism that is attached to the rod at the front of the floor to pull up.
I'm pretty sure that would be highly illegal anyway. However, even if it wasn't, if the floor manages to pass the 100kg load test applied by the FIA then there is no way that the approx 72kg Webber (let alone 65kg Vettel!) would somehow be able to make it flex.Spacepace wrote:I have a theory on the flexi floor of the red bull. Could it be that when the driver sits in the car the weight of him engages some kind of mechanism that is attached to the rod at the front of the floor to pull up.
I do not know the technical regulations off the back of my hand, but I thought that the stay had to be fixed to the tub, so it wouldn't be able to pass through it.
But from who's car did the pictrues come? Weber's maybe?Jonnycraig wrote:Interesting that he persists with the tea tray temperature. As seen in Abu Dhabi, it was registering at the same temperature as the track - 40-50C.
This is exactly what has been discussed as one of the main topics for the last 10 or so pages. We were all talking about the floor bending up not down. Don't want to be a dick about it but read back.CBeck113 wrote:But from who's car did the pictrues come? Weber's maybe?Jonnycraig wrote:Interesting that he persists with the tea tray temperature. As seen in Abu Dhabi, it was registering at the same temperature as the track - 40-50C.
As for the hinge, I believe that the floors are not allowed to flex downward, but need to be flexible when they drive over the curbs (i.e. upward), so they need a certain degree of freedom. A fixed support in this location would lead to failures (look at the pictures of MW's RB9 on the hook - the scratches stop where the floor meets the chassis). At first though upward flexing in this area would be a disadvantage, but this would reduce the wear on the floor board, allowing it to be set up lower to the ground.