Thisgold333 wrote:What if the car had no splitter?
Flat bottom.
All the way to the back, no diffuser.
Rule designed ground force venturies aligned with the CG.
Fixes the front/rear wing proportion issue to.
Thisgold333 wrote:What if the car had no splitter?
acosmichippo wrote:I honestly don't see what the "problem" is. who cares if the noses are a little funky? I think it gives them character; so far we have 5 out of 5 completely unique takes on the nose design. I think most fans would agree that the sport is over-regulated as it is, so why should we support even more regulation to change something that doesn't affect the racing whatsoever?
+1acosmichippo wrote:I honestly don't see what the "problem" is. who cares if the noses are a little funky? I think it gives them character; so far we have 5 out of 5 completely unique takes on the nose design. I think most fans would agree that the sport is over-regulated as it is, so why should we support even more regulation to change something that doesn't affect the racing whatsoever?
I disagree. The undertray is more efficient in terms of drag than any wing. The incentive to feed clean airflow to the undertray still exists.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.
Yea, let's make F1 even more of a spec series.AnthonyG wrote:It's just a brainstorm idea, but perhaps a standardized nosecone shape would bring a solution.
Teams would however be allowed to bolt on strakes and flaps to a limited extent.
There is a diffuser.rjsa wrote: This
Flat bottom.
All the way to the back, no diffuser.
Simples.gold333 wrote:What single element in the regulations could be changed to eliminate the wish for designers to move air under the car
+1lebesset wrote:+1acosmichippo wrote:I honestly don't see what the "problem" is. who cares if the noses are a little funky? I think it gives them character; so far we have 5 out of 5 completely unique takes on the nose design. I think most fans would agree that the sport is over-regulated as it is, so why should we support even more regulation to change something that doesn't affect the racing whatsoever?
You can only add so much rake before you start stalling the floor...WillerZ wrote:That wouldn't work; rake the car and the whole floor becomes a diffuser which you need to get air underneath.
Moreover, concessions are already made for the appearance of the cars in the form of regulations that require open wheels and an open cockpit. Neither are ideal solutions from a performance standpoint, but each is a fixture of F1 design simply because that's how fans expect F1 cars to look.rich1701 wrote:[...]
Ugly is bad for the image of the sport.
They'll all still watch it though. They will not take it kindly at all, no sir!rich1701 wrote: And that simply will not be tolerated by the media, or by the fans.
Ugly is bad for the image of the sport.