Re: extending the "tea tray"...
Rules state that the floor must not extend forward beyond the radius of the front tyre.
As in behind the front tyre.theWPTformula wrote:Re: extending the "tea tray"...
Rules state that the floor must not extend forward beyond the radius of the front tyre.
one rule working against this is the limit to the size of suspension members. the tea tray, if it becomes a suspension member, would be limited to 100mm width and would have to be very thick with a 3.5 - 1 aspect ratio.marcush. wrote:I´d think the CofG reasoning at the front is lame as all the parts are high up anyways in that area .The effect is totally overruled by any Ballst you are able to place in the splitter teatray area.
I think anything you can do to make things light in the area of the raised nose is worth a lot but less so the actual placement within that 300x300 crossection.
If there was a solution to actually place heavy parts (dampers ,rockers ,springs ,steering rack and hydraulics much lower but still retaining the high nose it would be something -but as things stand the pull rod layout does not score benefits here.
I ´m still intrigued by the idea of abandonning the double A arm layout at the front and I´m surprised nobody even tried something different ,considering the massive knowhow in designing and fabricating stiff yet flexible CF products.
In crude words:elongate the teatray a bit forward and attach a crossbeam to it -voila -front suspension done the flxure to mount it to the car floor could double up as ride spring leves only the question whrer to put the dampers and still get a decent motion ratio ....that approach could help to move a lot of parts away from the high up position without disturbing the flow (the beam could be an airfoil shape and help flow coming from the front wing?)
Good point.thisisatest wrote:one rule working against this is the limit to the size of suspension members. the tea tray, if it becomes a suspension member, would be limited to 100mm width and would have to be very thick with a 3.5 - 1 aspect ratio.marcush. wrote:I´d think the CofG reasoning at the front is lame as all the parts are high up anyways in that area .The effect is totally overruled by any Ballst you are able to place in the splitter teatray area.
I think anything you can do to make things light in the area of the raised nose is worth a lot but less so the actual placement within that 300x300 crossection.
If there was a solution to actually place heavy parts (dampers ,rockers ,springs ,steering rack and hydraulics much lower but still retaining the high nose it would be something -but as things stand the pull rod layout does not score benefits here.
I ´m still intrigued by the idea of abandonning the double A arm layout at the front and I´m surprised nobody even tried something different ,considering the massive knowhow in designing and fabricating stiff yet flexible CF products.
In crude words:elongate the teatray a bit forward and attach a crossbeam to it -voila -front suspension done the flxure to mount it to the car floor could double up as ride spring leves only the question whrer to put the dampers and still get a decent motion ratio ....that approach could help to move a lot of parts away from the high up position without disturbing the flow (the beam could be an airfoil shape and help flow coming from the front wing?)
this doesnt rule out your thought, but it sure puts a damper on things.
Unless you connect it to the nose with a profiled rod of course, wouldn't disturb anything and stiffness would be right there.wuzak wrote: ...
Good point.
The extra width would require a very thick section, and thus any aero advantage would be lost.
Wouldn't that just be normal suspension then?xpensive wrote:Unless you connect it to the nose with a profiled rod of course, wouldn't disturb anything and stiffness would be right there.wuzak wrote: ...
Good point.
The extra width would require a very thick section, and thus any aero advantage would be lost.
Connect the teatray to the nose structure from below.wuzak wrote: ...
Wouldn't that just be normal suspension then?
I think I need to see a concept sketch.xpensive wrote:Connect the teatray to the nose structure from below.wuzak wrote: ...
Wouldn't that just be normal suspension then?
High aero open wheel cars tend to have quite high wheel rates / roll stiffness / etc. It's not like the car is going to have immense amounts of suspension travel going around. So ultimately I don't see the camber control etc. being a big deal.marcush. wrote:I cannot see where a current formula 1 car has any advanatge in terms of swing arm or camber control - teams seem to deliberately introduce horrible scrub and things in bump and with paralell equal length wishbones your cambers in roll are all over the place
You mean to have a rigid structure?xpensive wrote:That's what I'm trying to suggest, connect it to the nose with a beam or whatever, the new rules should open up for that?
I don't think that marcush wants to extend it, but to attach the suspension to it, which means with a joint - that should get through the regs, and it would function nicely as a tray extension because of the necessary profile. Joining it to the nose would be interesting - you could have a tray that extends to the front wing, and have the joints on the wing mounts. The drawback here is that the suspension can be damaged by a simple touch, and the wing element alone would have to be replaceable, not the whole nose.wuzak wrote:You cannot extend the "tea tray" (ie, the floor) past where it is.
The bodywork ahead of a line 330mm behind the front wheel centreline must be a minimum of 75mm above the reference plane, which is 50mm above the step plane, which the bottom of the "tea tray" falls on. Basically any "extension" forward of that point will be part of the tub.