McLaren is doing the same as rb with the rear wishbones, just more agressively or
http://shrani.si/f/3g/RO/3qxyjbJ9/dms1428ja501.jpg
Blanchimont wrote:The cross sections could look something like this, the symmetry line can point up or down 5°.
That would be moveable aero.McG wrote:Maybe the flaps twist into a more horizontal position at high speed.
Here http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/wp-content/u ... 2014-2.jpg you can see the profile from above. My picture might exaggerate the real profile, but i think comes close to the real one.avatar wrote:My guess (previous page) was concave top/bottom to begin with, but as I drew i switched to convex surfaces to give a wing profile....?Blanchimont wrote:The cross sections could look something like this, the symmetry line can point up or down 5°.
But from what I remember of the flexi-wings if it passes the test then even if we can see them bending on track then it doesn't matter. However, in this case I really doubt it'll be an issue. We're dealing with suspension arms and I can't believe that you're going to want them twisting. That's the other thing to remember about this design, for all the aero benefits, who knows how the geometry will upset the tyre usage. Who knows - could be the silver bullet but we've been here with mac before!Shakeman wrote:That would be moveable aero.McG wrote:Maybe the flaps twist into a more horizontal position at high speed.
For me that would make an angle of 85° instead of 5° in relation to the reference plane as the largest axis of symmetry forms the angle with the RP.Blackout wrote:Why would they need to chage the ratio ? maybe they just rotated them
like this (blue instead of red)
http://www.servimg.com/image_preview.ph ... u=14795526
OkBlanchimont wrote:For me that would make an angle of 85° instead of 5° in relation to the reference plane as the largest axis of symmetry forms the angle with the RP.Blackout wrote:Why would they need to chage the ratio ? maybe they just rotated them
like this (blue instead of red)
http://www.servimg.com/image_preview.ph ... u=14795526
"The major axis will be defined as the largest axis of symmetry of any such cross-section"
I dunno about silver bullet, it looks like a pretty inefficient surface to present to the airflow. Maybe McLaren are testing the waters, seeing if others bite and maybe turn it 45 deg so it becomes a beam wing. Others will surely follow as it appears something that could easily be incorporated if necessary.bonjon1979 wrote:But from what I remember of the flexi-wings if it passes the test then even if we can see them bending on track then it doesn't matter. However, in this case I really doubt it'll be an issue. We're dealing with suspension arms and I can't believe that you're going to want them twisting. That's the other thing to remember about this design, for all the aero benefits, who knows how the geometry will upset the tyre usage. Who knows - could be the silver bullet but we've been here with mac before!Shakeman wrote:That would be moveable aero.McG wrote:Maybe the flaps twist into a more horizontal position at high speed.
That's a nice shot, I think it validates exactly what you described (in concept even if your dimensions are a bit more extreme) - a scoop profile rather than a wing.Blanchimont wrote:Here http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/wp-content/u ... 2014-2.jpg you can see the profile from above. My picture might exaggerate the real profile, but i think comes close to the real one.avatar wrote:My guess (previous page) was concave top/bottom to begin with, but as I drew i switched to convex surfaces to give a wing profile....?Blanchimont wrote:The cross sections could look something like this, the symmetry line can point up or down 5°.
Maybe the wings twist backwards some degrees as the downforce puts pressure on the suspension. I think such a twisting motion would not be hard to build in to the suspension compression. This would also pass the FIA load tests because it's not actually flexing. There would be no way for this to be tested.Shakeman wrote:That would be moveable aero.McG wrote:Maybe the flaps twist into a more horizontal position at high speed.
McG wrote:Maybe the wings twist backwards some degrees as the downforce puts pressure on the suspension. I think such a twisting motion would not be hard to build in to the suspension compression. This would also pass the FIA load tests because it's not actually flexing. There would be no way for this to be tested.Shakeman wrote:That would be moveable aero.McG wrote:Maybe the flaps twist into a more horizontal position at high speed.