Somerfield is a joke. He came to f1t, learned a few big words from our members, and throws them around to write bs drivel.LookBackTime wrote:Bite-size tech: Williams FW38 front wing mounting pillars
http://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/bite- ... ontent=www
by: Giorgio Piola, Technical Editor
Co-author: Matt Somerfield, Assistant Technical Editor
1 hour ago
Williams continues to chase the leading pack, which has now been joined by Red Bull intensifying the battle behind the Mercedes.
The FW38 follows in a lineage of Williams cars that have a low drag philosophy, albeit this has been marginalised in recent times as it looks to rectify some inefficiences in lower speed corners.
For Canada, the front wing mounting pillars have been revised, changing the movement of airflow under and around the car as they focus their efforts on a low-medium downforce configuration for the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve.
http://cdn-1.motorsport.com/images/mgl/ ... detail.jpg
Having already revised the nose back in Bahrain they initally struggled to maximise its potential and have since made changes to the turning vanes and splitter to extract performance.
However, in Canada changes to the mounting pillars show the area is still under scrutiny and small adjustments can have a bearing on the net performance of the car.
The leading edge of pillars have been reshaped, with a much taller straight edge extruding upward from the mainplane, giving a much sharper decline to the main nose structure.
http://cdn-1.motorsport.com/images/mgl/ ... detail.jpg
In comparison, the Monaco specification features a very short straight edge before the pillars slope back to meet with the nose. Whilst a small detail it is worth noting that some small indent lines, running from the front edge of the pillar have been added too.
Every team was blasting away from Mercedes out of the hairpin. Merc apparently chose to compromise their car there in exchange for a gain someplace else. Both Merc drivers had to take a very large, round arc thru that corner instead of pinching down at the apex and powering off sooner in a straight-ish line.Sevach wrote: 2-Bottas was blasting away from Rosberg out of the hairpin, like seriously blasting away, like he had 50 more horses
Rosberg could never get close enough to attempt anything, traction looks good =D>
That may be the case, Rosberg was nothing special indeed, Verstappen also could open a somewhat decent gap before Mercedes power and DRS reeled him in, but i'm still very impressed with Bottas traction out of the hairpin.bill shoe wrote:Every team was blasting away from Mercedes out of the hairpin. Merc apparently chose to compromise their car there in exchange for a gain someplace else. Both Merc drivers had to take a very large, round arc thru that corner instead of pinching down at the apex and powering off sooner in a straight-ish line.Sevach wrote: 2-Bottas was blasting away from Rosberg out of the hairpin, like seriously blasting away, like he had 50 more horses
Rosberg could never get close enough to attempt anything, traction looks good =D>
Certainly agree with the rest of your observations. Let's hope Williams produce more of those magic suspension parts in time for Massa at Baku.