actually, the caterham atleast with the updated nose looks the best and is the slowest.....SiLo wrote:And looks very similar to the Merc nose. Maybe Merc should take note?
Once again this year, the best looking car has been fastest
Before the existence of Mercedes F1, it used to Brawn. So it would make sense to me that somewhere deep down in R&D at Brackley, there's still some plans and data regarding that very special Brawn GP car in 2009.Manoah2u wrote:actually, the caterham atleast with the updated nose looks the best and is the slowest.....SiLo wrote:And looks very similar to the Merc nose. Maybe Merc should take note?
Once again this year, the best looking car has been fastest
I guess that a low budget team such as Marussia wanted to pass frontal crash tests without big expenditures... A very short nose implies hard work tuning carbon fiber layers in order to pass FIA's crash test, and Marussia coul'd afford it.Blaze1 wrote:Why is the nose of the 50% scale 2015 Marussia model so long, what benefit would such a design bring?
That is what crossed my mind variante, which is also why I mentioned Scarbs' W06 comment. Perhaps Scarbs was talking specifically about the nose tip design and not nose length. If that is the case I'd expect the W06 to have minimum length nose.variante wrote:I guess that a low budget team such as Marussia wanted to pass frontal crash tests without big expenditures... A very short nose implies hard work tuning carbon fiber layers in order to pass FIA's crash test, and Marussia coul'd afford it.Blaze1 wrote:Why is the nose of the 50% scale 2015 Marussia model so long, what benefit would such a design bring?
Probably there's an aerodynamic factor as well...maybe a long nose suits better Marussia's aerodynamics...but it's hard for us to judge that aspect
Thanks Scarbs'scarbs wrote:A longer nose is easier to crash test, there's certainly some teams that will not be able to create a short nose that will pass the crash test.
For those better funded teams capable of a short nose, might still find a longer nose a lighter solution.
But also...
As the nose tip is now forced to be much closer to the front wing, its likely the teams will make somethign of the interaction between the two and curve the nose's underside over the centre wing section to create some downforce from the diverging gap between nose and track behind the FW section. Perhaps aided by the frotn wing pylons and a chin fairing as seen on the Red Bull this year. Lotus acheived something similar with thier short nose tested earlier this year.
My information is that most teams will run with longer noses, with a distinct short finger (thumb?) sticking out from the end
If the 2015 technical regulations prevent the vanity panel from extending beyond the nose tip, then the nose of that model wouldn't be legal, as it doesn't appear to be thick enough at a point 50mm behind the tip to fit the required cross-sectional dimensions.Hail22 wrote:Even though this is a model / mock up by Silverstone paints for what I'm assuming is for a private customer of a 2014 chassis with Senna livery...could that nose type "theoretically" be legal for 2015? Albeit the front nose profile being more narrow than the duck / platypus bill shown in the model.