I am sure it is not beyond the wit of man to shape the floor such that the flow wont choke. Alternatively there is always bump stops.wesley123 wrote:Current floors run in ground effect as well. But I get what you mean, tunnels like the wing cars of the 80s.
And no, they will not return. A significant issue with aero in proximity to the ground is that their downforce generation changes based on distance to the ground. Too close to the ground and you suddenly kill most downforce. This makes the whole thing just dangerous, and is the reason why underbody aero is heavily regulated in pretty much every series.
I love this sentence, it has been making me chuckle with its obviousness. Surely though we can extend this sentence to everything ever designed to fit an F1 car that wasnt mandated by the rules.theriusDR3 wrote: Ground effects underbody are used to make the car faster.
brakes?Facts Only wrote:I love this sentence, it has been making me chuckle with its obviousness. Surely though we can extend this sentence to everything ever designed to fit an F1 car that wasnt mandated by the rules.theriusDR3 wrote: Ground effects underbody are used to make the car faster.
No engineer has ever willingly fitted anything to an F1 car that has made it go slower.
How much slower would cars be if they had to coast down to speeds suitable for cornering?flynfrog wrote:brakes?
Ha! Bloody smart arse!flynfrog wrote:brakes?Facts Only wrote:I love this sentence, it has been making me chuckle with its obviousness. Surely though we can extend this sentence to everything ever designed to fit an F1 car that wasnt mandated by the rules.theriusDR3 wrote: Ground effects underbody are used to make the car faster.
No engineer has ever willingly fitted anything to an F1 car that has made it go slower.
That had to register at least 8.5 on the Pucker Scale.flynfrog wrote:Depends where we take the data from.