Team: Pat Symonds (CTO), Rob Smedley (Head of Performance Engineering), Jason Somerville (HA), Ed Wood (CD), Claire Williams (DTP), Frank Williams (TP), Mike O'Driscoll (Group CEO) Drivers: Felipe Massa (19), Valtteri Bottas (77), Alex Lynn (Development) Team name: Williams Martini Racing
A place to discuss the characteristics of the cars in Formula One, both current as well as historical. Laptimes, driver worshipping and team chatter do not belong here.
Williams test "radical" new rear wing
By: Jonathan Noble, Formula 1 Editor
22 minutes ago
Williams caused a stir on the opening day of the first in-season test at Barcelona in Spain on Tuesday with a radical rear wing.
The double decker design was fitted to the car for the first run of the day by Alex Lynn – and features an extended wider plane ahead of the main wing elements, with extra winglets.
As well as the extended rear wing, the Williams was also fitted with extra carbon fibre devices at the front of the car too.
The height and shape of these devices - which extend beyond what is allowed in the regulations - would suggest that they are not actually being tested ahead of an actual introduction later this year.
However, it may be that they have been fitted to the car to allow the team a better understanding of aerodynamic loads and balances as it continues to try to improve its chassis.
The likely increase in aero loading delivered by the wings would, for example, help Williams better understand the implications of greater downforce on the car and the tyres.
This work would help both with 2016 and 2017 design concepts with teams now hard at work in preparing for next year's cars.
LookBackTime wrote:Tobi Grüner
Williams testing special rear wing with extra winglets. Not legal. Only for high-downforce simulation. #AMuS
Is that to simulate 2017 down force levels?
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By Chris Medland (F1i):
Alex Lynn took to the circuit with a rear wing which featured additional wings above the standard design. The front wing also features some additional components, with Williams telling F1i the designs are "to gain a better understanding of the car aero balance over a lap" and relevant to both this year and 2017.
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Is it? I thought it was directly over the RWCL so looking at the effect of added downforce at that point rather than past the RWCL which obviously acts as a pivot point
:edit:
Hmm, the post I was referring to has disappeared.
The post said the rear wing additions looked the same height at width of the 2017 rear wing
What's interesting to observe, is that they are using the old nose/front wing.
If you were trying to prove something out for this year, wouldn't you want to use your current race setup and then add things to it? Makes me believe all this is for development of next years car.
On another note, are they allowed to use a separate power unit for testing?