Temperature reader perhaps?
Temperature reader perhaps?
I don't know, but that's interesting...
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
This is something good or bad for Mclaren judging by an aerodynamic point of view?SectorOne wrote:I keep looking at images of this car and it´s just staggering what a transformation Mclaren has done.
The cokebottle is nothing short of insanity.
Here´s a quick image of the Macca and Ferrari cokebottles.
http://i.imgur.com/vF6lw4T.jpg
as you can see by the floor of the Mclaren expanding the angles are not perfect but should give a general idea of the main differences.
I think in a proper comparison the MClaren pods will follow the Ferrari pods until the UPS logo then taper inwards rapidly.
question btw, as i've never took the effort of looking into this 'stuff' - is there a logical / pre-ordaned 'order' on whichEgresi Tamás wrote:https://twitter.com/tgruener/status/561521712236224512
That is clearly to get an idea of the surface roughness. I am just not sure what they use if for. It might be for aero/CFD correlation, where it affects the boundary layer. Or the more obvious: tire grip.
just a thought; might use it and scan it in a 3D-scanner to read the surface and then update the 'track' model they have for simulations on tire wear and tire effects.mep wrote:That is clearly to get an idea of the surface roughness. I am just not sure what they use if for. It might be for aero/CFD correlation, where it affects the boundary layer. Or the more obvious: tire grip.
Pretty much that. If they did it about 10 places in each sector they would get a much accurate tyre simulation in the simulator and that would make their ability to manage the tyres correctly much better and into 2015 they may even be able to make their tyres last an extra 2 or 3 laps over the rest on the same pace, but in return it will leave the tyres extra material for the drivers to play with and push that extra tenth to tenth and a half extra per lap over a stint. If this is true over the season, ill be one happy man.Manoah2u wrote:just a thought; might use it and scan it in a 3D-scanner to read the surface and then update the 'track' model they have for simulations on tire wear and tire effects.mep wrote:That is clearly to get an idea of the surface roughness. I am just not sure what they use if for. It might be for aero/CFD correlation, where it affects the boundary layer. Or the more obvious: tire grip.
This image shows the McLaren as substantially wider than the Ferrari, and severely distorts the reality of how tight it is.SectorOne wrote:I keep looking at images of this car and it´s just staggering what a transformation Mclaren has done.
The cokebottle is nothing short of insanity.
Here´s a quick image of the Macca and Ferrari cokebottles.
http://i.imgur.com/vF6lw4T.jpg
as you can see by the floor of the Mclaren expanding the angles are not perfect but should give a general idea of the main differences.
I think in a proper comparison the MClaren pods will follow the Ferrari pods until the UPS logo then taper inwards rapidly.
I´m not so sure about that, sure it´s probably a bit wider but not substantially.Moose wrote:This image shows the McLaren as substantially wider than the Ferrari, and severely distorts the reality of how tight it is.