I think the idea of sensitivity doesn't hold in this case. You cannot increase the aoa without impacting the sensitivity at the same time. Every degree of disbalance on DF front to rear will be felt, especially in high speed corners.wesley123 wrote:Balancing out the car by reducing downforce on the other end of the car isn't really a thing done commonly in top-level motorsports. Like said, the front wing is very important for rear downforce as well, and removing siad flow conditioners would hurt downforce(which then means you don't need to balance it with the front wing anymore, making the initial action virtually pointless). So to balance out the front without hurting the rear you need to push the AoA. That is why a lot of teams run a five-plane wing(and Red Bull even a six-plane), to be able to push the AoA, but attempting to reduce sensitivity.PhillipM wrote: If they needed to work the front wing to it's outright limit to balance the rear downforce, you'd see a lot of the conditioners disappear for pure downforce producing devices. That's when you're starting to get limited with a chassis because you start compromising downstream and overall downforce for balance.
I don't see any team doing that yet.
This is the reason I believe Merc couldn't go with the blown wheel hub, they're simply using the front wing's upper corner as proxy to reshape the airflow sideways of the tyres and added an extra element just for this purpose. Whilst in Ferrari, Williams and Red Bull's case they have this area where they can use the front wing explicitely for pure down force and channeling the airflow inwards to the t-tray and difuse it to the rear underwash.
Again, what's the limiting factor? Its the Nose, they couldn't compromise the yaw balance which is mostly needed in high speed corners which we all know Merc has the advantage. The nose shape is the factor that gives them this balance, hence any change on it would reflect in poorer performance in highspeed curves. This is where I think the dilema rose, they stuck with their advantage on high speed hoping that they would increase the overall performance in mid and low corners with their serrations on t'tray and bargeboards. Very delicate margins they're running on, can't see how they would develope further without changing the nose shape.