I agree in most of those accounts. However, I'm not quite sold on the first part. Did the 2004 cars have moreabsolute downforce than in 2014? Since this year's cars are 15% heavier, cornering at the same speed as in 2004 requires 15% more downforce, plus the tyre deficit, which may not be insignificant. Is there *any* track record from 2007/2008, done with control Bridgestones?Ogami musashi wrote:Imho the 2004 are much faster than 2014 one, especially because in 2004 they had to qualify with one stint of fuel left (parc fermรฉ rules prevented to refuel the car between qualifying and start of the race) while in 2014 you qualify on fumes...
They had more downforce, more power, better tires, traction control, launch starts etc...
I would be extremely surprised if 2014 cars corner as fast as 2004 one in most corners. The G-meter in 2004 read 6 in the fastest ones.Miguel wrote:
I agree in most of those accounts. However, I'm not quite sold on the first part. Did the 2004 cars have moreabsolute downforce than in 2014? Since this year's cars are 15% heavier, cornering at the same speed as in 2004 requires 15% more downforce, plus the tyre deficit, which may not be insignificant. Is there *any* track record from 2007/2008, done with control Bridgestones?
I think Newey did not expressed himself properly in that Red Bulletin article. He claimned RB6 had probably the most downforce ever because they measured 5.5G in cornering. But I think he meant grip. If you pay attention, is quite common for some people in the motorsport circles to use downforce as meaning grip. I know this would be totally not expected from a genius like Newey but I guess even he can use inappropriate terminology, once in a while.Miguel wrote: I agree in most of those accounts. However, I'm not quite sold on the first part. Did the 2004 cars have moreabsolute downforce than in 2014? Since this year's cars are 15% heavier, cornering at the same speed as in 2004 requires 15% more downforce, plus the tyre deficit, which may not be insignificant. Is there *any* track record from 2007/2008, done with control Bridgestones?
There was this thread that had people quoting Newey as saying the RB6 is the car with the most absolute downforce ever. The challenge there was actually the flexi-skirt cars before 1983.
When it comes to the flexible-wing Red Bulls, I do. Newey could crank up as much downforce as he pleased, with very little regard to the deleterious effects of drag, because his front wings shed induced drag along straights as the tips drooped low enough to burst the vortices that form inside the end plates. Combined with the best EBD of its time, those cars made prodigious levels of downforce.Artur Craft wrote:[...]
Does anybody here believe the 2010-2013 cars could have had that much more downforce than early 2000's cars to beat even the 81/82, 93/94 I don't, at all
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The RB6 was the 2010 car with double diffuser. It is not the actual car so whether it is true or not this has no link with the topic.mrluke wrote:So wait, Newey says that the RB6 probably had the most downforce of any f1 car ever made, yet rather than listen to one of the worlds most renowned aerodynamicists who knew intimately how well the RB6 performed and exactly how much downforce it did actually make, you think it is more likely that he got his words muddled up as you dont believe that the current cars look as fast in the corners?
Oh, no, I don't doubt at all that a 2014 F1 will corner everything but the lowest speed stuff slower than a 2004 F1. What I doubt is whether the *actual* downforce, F, not normalised per mass, is actually higher now than it was in 2004. That'd translate to about 7-10% lower corner speed than in 2004.Ogami musashi wrote:I would be extremely surprised if 2014 cars corner as fast as 2004 one in most corners. The G-meter in 2004 read 6 in the fastest ones.Miguel wrote:
I agree in most of those accounts. However, I'm not quite sold on the first part. Did the 2004 cars have moreabsolute downforce than in 2014? Since this year's cars are 15% heavier, cornering at the same speed as in 2004 requires 15% more downforce, plus the tyre deficit, which may not be insignificant. Is there *any* track record from 2007/2008, done with control Bridgestones?
I know about the article you quote, this was for the double diffuser RB6. It is entirely possible, but the 2014 cars are far from it.
Huh? Of course they worried about drag. Drag squares with speed, at the kind of speeds that F1 cars go at, 800, 900 or 1200hp doesn't make an enormous difference to top speed.SiLo wrote:Probably find that with a screaming 900hp V10, those cars back then didn't worry too much about drag.