basti313 wrote:I do not think this is right for a modern F1 car.
- Lowering camber can work in both directions...you still need camber to get the tires working and once you go for slicks you need as much camber as you can get.
You will still have heat in the tires. The reason for the camber is because when it rains the lines change to more of a V-shaped nature, minimizing lateral loads as much as possible. Less camber puts more tire on the ground in those situations.
basti313 wrote:- Raising the car is done by the tires. And you may loose downforce with it, something you do not want when it is wet.
Aquaplaning does not care about how much downforce you have.
basti313 wrote:- The suspension is already as soft as aero allows. Again: You can soften it, but loosing downforce ruins your race.
Not if you aquaplan from running a dry setup on a pissing wet circuit.
the majority of the corners in Hungaroring during wet sessions will be so slow that aero barely has any significant effect.
It´s all mechanical grip on a super slipper surface.
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