bhallg2k wrote:I think eliminating the neutral center section of the front wing would go a long way toward solving F1's "nose problem," because creating downforce right then and there is a far more efficient use of that real estate than using it to move airflow toward the rear of the car. Without a dire need for that area to remain free from obstruction, we'd likely see a return to CoG-friendly 2008-spec nose/chassis heights, and teams wouldn't have to resort to aesthetic abominations like the step-nose and whateverthehellwe'recallingthesemonstrosities in order to satisfy the regulations.
Moreover, now that there are additional areas available for performance differentiation between the cars - power, fuel efficiency, tire wear, aero, DRS, etc - the effects of "dirty air" have been somewhat marginalized anyway.
I disagree. The teams are trying to send air to the rear, not because there's no efficient way to create downforce at the nose (if they wanted to, they could pile on snow ploughs, and all the AoA they can on the front wing). Instead, they send air to the rear because there
isn't a way of generating downforce at the rear. They have a tiny diffuser, and a tiny rear wing, and no beam wing, and they basically have no way to generate enough downforce to push the driven wheels into the ground. The teams are already sacrificing front grip in order to get more rear grip. Adding more front grip is not going to change that.
The way to stop the high nose nonsense is actually to strip away even more room for manoeuvre with the front wing. That will make the teams have to actually use the front wing to produce downforce rather than to set up the rear of the car.
Of course, there's a reason that the FIA are not doing this, which is that as soon as they do this, the effects of following another car are multiplied many times over. The FIA have deliberately set up the sport as front downforce heavy, to minimise the penalty to following another car.