turbof1 wrote:
@Dans: I don't think it would be viewed as one single cross section if both pylons were equally long. I think they made one pylon shorter then the other, but then used the vanity panel to cover it up.
it's possible, but i think that would be an inferior design, because of the asymmetry.
Quoting scarabs:
Firstly the nose must meet a minimum tip height, this means the area 50mm behind the actual tip must be centred at 185mm above the cars reference plane (the bottom of the stepped floor), additionally this cross section must not be lower than 135mm (10mm above the front wing) or above 300mm. The cross section for the tip must be 9000mm2
http://scarbsf1.com/blog1/2014/01/23/f1 ... ger-noses/
as I read this.
1. go back from the tip of the nose 50 mm and slice down through it to make a sectional surface.
2. make sure the top of the surface is bellow 300mm
3. make sure the bottom of the surface is above 135mm
4. make sure the cross sectional area is at least 9000mm2 (I assume 9000 is a minimum and not an exact value)
5. make sure the center of the area is centered at 185mm above the reference plane.
The way I read this you could still have 300mm high noses if you used an inverted U shaped nose. The sectional area would be centered on the car center-line. All you would need to do is get the shape right to get the vertical center on target.
does anyone have the actual rule, not a quote of them?