If you thought that the bottom of the s**t aerodynamic solutions barrel has been scratched I present to you....
The 1969 Cosworth F1 car a.k.a. Cosworth's failed attempt to enter the competition with their own Formula 1 car.
The earliest car aero –not including the road Chrysler- was a vertical wing mounted on the left side of an Indy roadster. The ‘lift’ was vectored into centripetal force. Sorry, can’t find a picture, or even a mention anywhere.nacho wrote:It doesn't make sense for providing grip in corners unless the wings are active and stay perpendicular to ground.
In fairness to Cosworth, their car wasn't an attempt to use aerodynamics to improve pace, it was an attempt to give traction out of corners - something that cars of the time didn't excel at, hence the 4 wheel drift. If wings hadn't arrived in F1 for a few more years, the 4WD Cosworth might have been developed in to something worthwhile. As it was, aero downforce gave grip without weight and so cut the ground from under the Cosworth car with it's heavy, complicated drivetrain.stefan_ wrote:If you thought that the bottom of the s**t aerodynamic solutions barrel has been scratched I present to you....
The 1969 Cosworth F1 car a.k.a. Cosworth's failed attempt to enter the competition with their own Formula 1 car.