I went and had a look. It goes through the exhaust pipe, the exhaust has a teardrop shaped channel welded into it that the gearbox my mount goes through. No exhaust gasses touch the mount.mkable1370 wrote:I wonder, if the center support actually does go through the exhaust pipe, if the heating of the center support by exhaust gasses causes the support to expand causing the center section of the rear wing to move upwards slightly relative to the outer edges, which I believe are fixed in position via attachment of the end plates to the floor?atlantis wrote:(I don't think it's the case but) Let's assume the pylon goes through the exhaust: it occupy space inside the tube so less hot exhaust gases pass through it.
Does it help/affect engine performance?
Possible?
Great, thanks for that!scarbs wrote:I went and had a look. It goes through the exhaust pipe, the exhaust has a teardrop shaped channel welded into it that the gearbox my mount goes through. No exhaust gasses touch the mount.mkable1370 wrote:I wonder, if the center support actually does go through the exhaust pipe, if the heating of the center support by exhaust gasses causes the support to expand causing the center section of the rear wing to move upwards slightly relative to the outer edges, which I believe are fixed in position via attachment of the end plates to the floor?atlantis wrote:(I don't think it's the case but) Let's assume the pylon goes through the exhaust: it occupy space inside the tube so less hot exhaust gases pass through it.
Does it help/affect engine performance?
Possible?
Pretty sure the regulations require that all exhaust gasses must exit exclusively through the exhaust pipe. I suppose you could have a blind pipe plumbed to the exhaust which uses the exhaust gas to provide some sort of pressure activation. So long as the exhaust gasses didn't actually exit the system that way I'd think it would be legal.-Tifosi_dude- wrote:Would it be possible to run the exhaust gasses through the rear wing pillar and down through the crash structure to blow the diffuser?
So they have welded a titanium insert to the exhaust pipe. They will then also have a part welded on the inside like Scarbs said, and the bracket below the pipe. The vertical bits don't form a single continuous part but it doesn't mean they can't transfer load to one another.matt21 wrote:This looks like a welding seam to me. IMO the load carrying part in this arrangement is the pipe itself. Otherwise they have to weld it in place everytime they remove it.
The bracket shown in the inset above is only for mounting the wing pillar for installation checks when no exhaust is fitted.
I don´t even think they have welded someting inside, but that the pipe itself acts as a support.Per wrote:So they have welded a titanium insert to the exhaust pipe. They will then also have a part welded on the inside like Scarbs said, and the bracket below the pipe. The vertical bits don't form a single continuous part but it doesn't mean they can't transfer load to one another.
I would imagine the insert is indeed welded to the exhaust pipe but the rest of the pylon is somehow removable, although this is not clear from the available pictures.
FIA wrote:5.8.4 The last 150mm of any tailpipe must in its entirety :
a) Form a thin-walled unobstructed right circular cylinder with its axis +/- 5° to the car centre line when viewed from above the car and between 0° and 5° (tail up) to the reference plane when viewed from the side of the car.
Is it maybe before the last 150 mm?matt21 wrote:FIA wrote:5.8.4 The last 150mm of any tailpipe must in its entirety :
a) Form a thin-walled unobstructed right circular cylinder with its axis +/- 5° to the car centre line when viewed from above the car and between 0° and 5° (tail up) to the reference plane when viewed from the side of the car.
aleks_ader wrote:Look on this pic to see what i mean..
http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/Tor ... 849451.jpg
Thanks. I updated the article with your info.scarbs wrote:I went and had a look. It goes through the exhaust pipe, the exhaust has a teardrop shaped channel welded into it that the gearbox my mount goes through. No exhaust gasses touch the mount.
If you look closely at the picture you posted, you can see two weld seems on the left side in the picture, the rear of the mount. As Scarbs said, the support passes through a teardrop-shaped passage in the exhaust pipe, and is mounted to the top of the crash structure. I also imagine that the end of the exhaust pipe is only stuckinto the sleeve (in the right of the picture, appears to be a material that can compensate for heat expansion), and can be relatively easily removed when necessary. Nice solution, I just don't believe that there is an advantage due to weight. It will have an advantage when it improves the control of the exhaust gases, since this would help remove rotation in the stream.matt21 wrote:I don´t even think they have welded someting inside, but that the pipe itself acts as a support.Per wrote:So they have welded a titanium insert to the exhaust pipe. They will then also have a part welded on the inside like Scarbs said, and the bracket below the pipe. The vertical bits don't form a single continuous part but it doesn't mean they can't transfer load to one another.
I would imagine the insert is indeed welded to the exhaust pipe but the rest of the pylon is somehow removable, although this is not clear from the available pictures.
FIA wrote:5.8.4 The last 150mm of any tailpipe must in its entirety :
a) Form a thin-walled unobstructed right circular cylinder with its axis +/- 5° to the car centre line when viewed from above the car and between 0° and 5° (tail up) to the reference plane when viewed from the side of the car.