A deliberate and obvious mechanism that is designed to make the wing flex.. Building in flex by making the wing structure flexible is one thing, but actually having a device attached to the wing to make this happen is something else.mikeerfol wrote:So what exactly did they discover?
Yep. Laying the carbon fibre in the wings in a certain way for the stiffness to be directional and still pass the FIA test then flexing in use is one thing, they could argue its legal as it passes the test. Building a spring into the wing planes isn't something they can talk themselves out of, it's a mechanism built to purposely get around the wing flex rules. If it has got something like this, they could be in deep you know what.ChrisM40 wrote:A deliberate and obvious mechanism that is designed to make the wing flex.. Building in flex by making the wing structure flexible is one thing, but actually having a device attached to the wing to make this happen is something else.mikeerfol wrote:So what exactly did they discover?
So it isn't the carbon fibre layering (as mentioned here before), but a hidden spring in the flap adjuster. Are we suspecting that the intent is exploiting a loophole in the rules, or a deliberate act of doing something illegal?It emerged later from the paddock that the issue revolves around an illegal front flap adjuster. Journalist Adam Cooper was told the FIA discovered a leaf spring arrangement inside a rubber shroud.
That IS the question.. However, I can't imagine a leaf spring being used for anything less than a surface or area that was meant to bend/flex/deflect etc under load and in this case aero load.turbof1 wrote:http://www.f1technical.net/news/19827
So it isn't the carbon fibre layering (as mentioned here before), but a hidden spring in the flap adjuster. Are we suspecting that the intent is exploiting a loophole in the rules, or a deliberate act of doing something illegal?It emerged later from the paddock that the issue revolves around an illegal front flap adjuster. Journalist Adam Cooper was told the FIA discovered a leaf spring arrangement inside a rubber shroud.
For all we know it could be part of the adjustment mechanism and only designed to tension the adjustment mechanism.ChrisM40 wrote:A deliberate and obvious mechanism that is designed to make the wing flex.. Building in flex by making the wing structure flexible is one thing, but actually having a device attached to the wing to make this happen is something else.mikeerfol wrote:So what exactly did they discover?
apologies. Sent this from my phone. I tried using the TWEET feature but it didn't show correctly when I previewed it.Blanchimont wrote:I case you didn't notice, there's a tweet tag when writing a message.
https://twitter.com/adamcooperF1/status ... 9318028290