wesley123 wrote:Abstractness wrote:wesley123 wrote:
You mean the car you couldn't drive behind because it kept sucking up debris everywhere?
Also, downforce is dependent on speed, so a fan wont magically give you the same downforce everywhere. Plus, at low(er) speeds the car is limited by mechanical grip, not downforce.
As I previously said "the rules can be adapted such that the down force does not increase additionally with speed".
So the specific construction used by the Brabham team would not be legal anymore.
For instance skirts would remain illegal. Instead the air would be sucked up vertically by a more centrally placed fan. The air would flow in from all sides. The underside of the car would have more of a doughnut-like curvature to produce a strong ground effect even when the car is standing. So it wouldn't be limited in the same way as a current F1 car.
The fan car worked by sealing the floor, it's an requirement in making the whole thing work. If air can just freely flow in it wouldn't create much of a suction effect, as the whole thing needs to create a vacuum under the car. At least, that was the thought with the BT46 as well as the Chaparral 2J.
The Lotus 78 used the Venturi effect under the side pods to generate down force.
Now instead of having high speed air flow from the front to back you could also construct a standing car having airflow from all sides to the center, where the fan is. The underside would be curved such that all the air flow follows a Venturi channel profile, which is why I said "doughnut-like curvature". Additionally you could use the flow to induce a big vortex around the center underneath the car which would produce additional vacuum. If the rotation of the fan upsets the sideways-balance just use a fan for each side of the car spinning in opposite directions.
If this is not powerful enough already, then a sealed off area should be legalized.
Even with higher slip angles it would still be near impossible to see the car move from a grandstand, so unless you want the cars to drift(which would look pretty funny tbh) this is pretty much a no-go.
The viewers on the grandstand are not what brings in the real money, It's the people behind the TV. So it would make a difference.
Except those viewers can already very well see what the driver is doing.
No they can't. They can only see a small fraction of it.
If we let's say double the optimal slip angles there would be larger yaw angles as well as larger corrections on the steering wheel which would produce better off board as well as on board footage. Here you see F1 drivers on different tyres, off course we don't need such big slip angles:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A8tRLdqFbe0
Also check out how differently the steering wheel is moved:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MtFbXJydEXg