through FIA's latest transcript exposé (WMSC's Renault hearing) and a number of things caught my attention. Among them was Paddy Lowe's description of the so called "screen grab" document and a few notions he offered on fundamental design principles:
Now, I've been under the impression that the current default design of the engine (and crankshaft), driveshaft (a.k.a input shaft) and gearbox output shaft is such that they're parallel, crank- and driveshaft being lined up one after the other. The driveshaft goes from the clutch plates into the gearbox. Whether they're all together at a very, very shallow angle in "neutral" conditions in relation to the "level" chassis itself is one thing, but Lowe's choice of words has me wondering whether the driveshaft (or gearbox input shaft, terminology being somewhat relative in this context) angle might actually be very different to the crankshaft angle in the MP4-22. This impression is by no means alleviated by the notion of the positioning and angle being somehow "crucial". (Then again, what isn't in F1 design?)FIA's stenographer, quoting Patrick Lowe in the WMSC transcript, wrote:This sheet mainly details prime dimensions for the car. In the submission, there are eight headings, showing the key dimensions covered. If I were to summarise the main utility of those dimensions, they would have to do with knowing how the key components in the car are positioned relative to the cockpit and the wheels. The main issue there is weight allocation in the car; positioning of the main components says a great deal about this. Details such as the drive shaft position and angle are crucial. (a blacked out, censored statement follows) This information would make it possible to understand how McLaren has positioned the key components and achieved a certain weight distribution.
Conventional CV joints can be run only at an angle of a couple of degrees without friction losses that'd undoubtedly be unacceptable in F1 terms. Given the additional packaging problems I guess the use of a conventional CV joint in this purpose hasn't been all too easy to justify, but could it be that McLaren has been making a use of the Thompson coupling already? They'd do so only if there was a significant advantage to it. In theory the engine could be lowered still with radically different shaft angles, but given the severe design limitations on the engine itself is there actually any room to do so currently? Have the radii of the gears been determined in part by the "level" geometry and if so, could the gearbox be packaged in a smaller space still if the shafts within were placed at a certain upward angle towards the differential? (The CV joint being neatly "wedged" between the clutch and the gearbox.)
Is there some advantage to suspension geometry that could be attained in this way? And what about aerodynamic packaging, with the V8s it's already been pretty amazing just how "empty" the rears seem but hey, I guess every spare mm to optimise the flow can and will be used. I hope my thoughts on this haven't come over as completely senseless, this was just stream of thought sorta affair as I was wading through the document. I also wouldn't mind some discussion as to how one starts to put the fundamentals into place once designing a F1 car "from the scratch". Lowe seems to use the cockpit and the wheels as original references (in addition to general design geometry rules, I have to presume).

Image linked from cvcoupling.com
Thompson Couplings Limited - link