STR builds its own gearbox casing. Only the internals (and some parts of the casing often come from RBR and X-trac)
dren wrote:Sevach wrote:dren wrote:
It didn't seem to hurt Ferrari?
It did hurt Ferrari, so much that they are changing this design.
It hurt Ferrari so much that they must have accidentally won those three races. The under steer must have been so awful in that dominant tight circuit victory.
Everything points to Ferrari moving the MGUK for more space under the transmission and rear crash structure for aero gains, similar to other teams; like Mercedes.
The Sauber car just looked like a handful. I would not attribute that to the Ferrari PU. I'd take a wild guess and say the chassis wasn't the best. The Ferrari cars looked quite stable.
How do you know that didnt hurt Ferrari? What if in a parralel universe, the Ferrari had a shorter wheelbase due to a shorter rear end? maybe that car is a bit faster than the actual F2015 mrgreen:
Anyway, the topic is not Ferrari, the Scuderi probably found the right solutions for it, but we're talking about the Sauber problem, which might be a Toro Rosso problem too in 2016.
Dall'Ara
The fact is that the car understeers, too. I think you will find it is common to the paddock; these cars are just too long for the tracks we use.
One of the frustrations we have is the understeer and there is not much we can do about that,’ Dall’Ara says. ‘It’s the wheelbase you want to change but ultimately that is constrained by the amount of stuff we have to put in the car, so you can only be so short. So that is annoying as an engineer, but you just can’t do it. You’d like to do your own thing but
we are not in the position to do that. I’m glad we can have the current specification parts from Ferrari, they are very good parts, so that’s good and we try to do the best we can. The only constraint really is the inboard suspension pick up point but, if we want a shorter wheelbase we move the wheels where we want and you end up with the suspension sweeping forward and you can’t really do it.