Tim.Wright wrote: Its not the side crash structure. You can see the turning vanes under the nose.
Yeah it is part of the tray
when you zoom it shows that metallic profile
Tim.Wright wrote: Its not the side crash structure. You can see the turning vanes under the nose.
Revealing our livery for this weekend at Yas Marina Circuit
The change is due to alcohol advertising restrictions in the UAE. You may recognise this version of the livery from F1 Games from Codemasters as we also supplied it for F1 2014
The old chassis was always fairly good. They never got a hold of the EBD; the car improved when they removed it. Now nobody has an EBD so that is in Williams favor. The Mercedes PU has been the class of the field, so that gave the new car a boost. I expect Willaims to produce a good 2016 package, but the Mclaren and Red Bull will be better, too. Lotus may very well be back in the hunt since they procured Mercedes power.Alexgtt wrote:There's something very neat and right about the Williams. It's some achievement, where they are v's this time last year. Has there been such an amazing turn around by a team in recent years? Just considering where they'll be if the current rate of improvement continues next year. Are we indeed seeing a genuine 2016 contender and a return to the glory days? I sincerely hope so. I know we talk about no factory engine deal but they've done it before with factory teams all round them.
You can see that this thing is very strongly built. It is not a breather hole as holes facing down is not allowed. It seems to be some sort of cantiliver to meet the regulation on deflection of the floor. I am not sure why it is so large and round though. Maybe some electronics inside... You can see the tip of it is metal. This could be for ruggedness (titanium) or for ballast (tungsten). If it was ballast it would vibrate A alot at the end of the pole so I have some doubts that it is ballast.emmepi27 wrote:Very interesting shot! (Amus)
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/B243PxsCAAABnUw.jpg:large
Nice pic here detailsmikeerfol wrote:https://twitter.com/LukeSmithF1/status/ ... 0048215040
Looks like a structural support for the tea-tray. It looks like the upper two mounts at the rear may be some kind of suspension system that controls the vertical motion/force of the front of the support. Can't clearly see if they are bushings or something else, but they do not look like simple hard mounts into a carbon structure.LookBackTime wrote:GP Abu Dhabi 2014 - Thursday
http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/Wil ... 824853.jpg
I can't see any overt suspension for the T-tray there. I see the heads of two bolts, and two washers. Where do you see suspension?bill shoe wrote:Looks like a structural support for the tea-tray. It looks like the upper two mounts at the rear may be some kind of suspension system that controls the vertical motion/force of the front of the support. Can't clearly see if they are bushings or something else, but they do not look like simple hard mounts into a carbon structure.LookBackTime wrote:GP Abu Dhabi 2014 - Thursday
http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/Wil ... 824853.jpg
FIA continues to simultaneously say "no degrees of freedom for aero parts" and "yes you can use overt suspension for the Tea-tray".
The suspension-ish mount is vague, but I think it's there for two reasons-Moose wrote:I can't see any overt suspension for the T-tray there. I see the heads of two bolts, and two washers. Where do you see suspension?bill shoe wrote:Looks like a structural support for the tea-tray. It looks like the upper two mounts at the rear may be some kind of suspension system that controls the vertical motion/force of the front of the support. Can't clearly see if they are bushings or something else, but they do not look like simple hard mounts into a carbon structure.LookBackTime wrote:GP Abu Dhabi 2014 - Thursday
http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/Wil ... 824853.jpg
FIA continues to simultaneously say "no degrees of freedom for aero parts" and "yes you can use overt suspension for the Tea-tray".
Anthony Stuart @Anthony_Stuart 46 Min.Vor 46 Minuten
that Williams that lost its sidepod is responsible for some of my favorite F1 photos this season