Just saw Maldonado oversteering in Eau Rouge and it looked to me the hot air exit at the back is asymmetrical.
Like a big cannon on the left, a small on on the right side.
Am i seeing things?
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
Don't think so. There were plenty of asymmetrical cooling outlets on the mid-00's cars (Williams and Ferrari most notably) with perfectly symmetrical noses.f1316 wrote:Could it be that every bit of asymmetry downstream is all to compensate for the effects of the nose concept? I.e. the airflow is already asymmetrical because of the nose so they're trying to even it up with asymmetrical bodywork.
If so, seems like a lot of effort for a slightly higher nose...
McLaren has had their pieces of asymmetric bodywork as well. Both asymmetric sidepod intake and outlets, and asymmetric exhaust outlets.timbo wrote:Don't think so. There were plenty of asymmetrical cooling outlets on the mid-00's cars (Williams and Ferrari most notably) with perfectly symmetrical noses.f1316 wrote:Could it be that every bit of asymmetry downstream is all to compensate for the effects of the nose concept? I.e. the airflow is already asymmetrical because of the nose so they're trying to even it up with asymmetrical bodywork.
If so, seems like a lot of effort for a slightly higher nose...
The rear end might also be for the testing only, to check both configurations at once.
You mean Nascar on an oval ring? They are meant to constantly turning left, but not F1 cars. AFAIK teams build up their car in half and let the computer calculate the rest. Since the car is identical , and if the car with a side only more downforce, I believe they will lost a lot of time on the straightaway.JRodrigues wrote:Could it be that it provides more downforce to the left side of the car (since it is a clockwise track)? Like in NASCAR where the cars are lower on the left side.
Wow! That's quite an asymmetry!lio007 wrote:A closer look to their asymmetric bodywork:
http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/Lot ... 805524.jpg