2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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scarbs
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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[quote="FW17"]So what were they doing?

Generating hydraulic pressure and accumulating it using wheel movements and using it at certain set time on the entire suspension assembly without complete reference to rocker movement?

More active than passive I guess[/qupote]

Kerching, yes.

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RedNEO
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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Just_a_fan wrote:
RedNEO wrote:Can't be a bad thing for Ferrari. They've effectively taken away a chunk of performance from not one but two of there biggest rivals.
Like as not they couldn't get it to work properly so jabbed Charlie in to action instead. Typical Ferrari really.
From what we are hearing it takes along time to get something like this to work as well as Mercedes or Red Bull. So while it may be partially true what you say about Ferrari if they have inturn indirectly helped McLaren I won't complain.

KeiKo403
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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Is this Ferrari trying to curb Merc and RBR advantage or do Ferrari genuinely have a super complex suspension design that they want to check the legality of prior to running it and potentially getting disqualified?

I mean I'd think that all teams would have they're main chassis and suspension designs completed by now to allow them time to refine aero packages etc? (although I could be wrong on that)

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AnthonyG
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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I would really like to have some insight (drawing, animation) as to how this system works? Because from the description it's hard to envision how it works.

Follow op remark from the article on http://www.pitpass.com/58112/Ferrari-qu ... suspension
According to Article 3.15 the primary function of suspension designs must be to improve ride quality, with any aerodynamic benefit purely incidental. Charlie Whiting's clarification at the time effectively said it was the FIA's opinion that, while the systems did improve the ride quality, the primary purpose for interlinked suspension was to improve aerodynamics.
So this means that any suspension design can be deemed illegal if a team makes an enquiry saying they want to "copy" a certain setup because it gives an aerodynamic advantage?
Thank you really doesn't really describe enough what I feel. - Vettel

basti313
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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KeiKo403 wrote:Is this Ferrari trying to curb Merc and RBR advantage or do Ferrari genuinely have a super complex suspension design that they want to check the legality of prior to running it and potentially getting disqualified?
If you read the inquiry it is quite clear, that it is just to get these things banned by outlining the pure aero benefits.
KeiKo403 wrote:I mean I'd think that all teams would have they're main chassis and suspension designs completed by now to allow them time to refine aero packages etc? (although I could be wrong on that)
Hard to guess. Reverting to a "normal" suspension is surely no problem from the point of chassis or suspension. But if you give your aero a lower working range as you trust the suspension to keep the perfect ride height, this may be a big issue.
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Just_a_fan
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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KeiKo403 wrote:Is this Ferrari trying to curb Merc and RBR advantage or do Ferrari genuinely have a super complex suspension design that they want to check the legality of prior to running it and potentially getting disqualified?
This is Ferrari knowingly using the system to get the Merc/RedBull systems banned. Ferrari either haven't got the system or can't get their version to work well enough / in time. By making Merc/RedBull revert to a more traditional system they hope to claw back some of their performance deficiency. It smacks of the bad old days when F1 was decided in court rooms more often than on race tracks.

It would be an extremely risky game to use the FIA's formal query system to get a rival's system banned whilst hoping to run your own version. If your version is successfully challenged at the start of the season, you'd be on the back foot right up until at least the European races if not later. Thus I feel that Ferrari are unable to get the system to work successfully and so are looking for a ban.
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wuzak
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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Just_a_fan wrote:
KeiKo403 wrote:Is this Ferrari trying to curb Merc and RBR advantage or do Ferrari genuinely have a super complex suspension design that they want to check the legality of prior to running it and potentially getting disqualified?
This is Ferrari knowingly using the system to get the Merc/RedBull systems banned. Ferrari either haven't got the system or can't get their version to work well enough / in time. By making Merc/RedBull revert to a more traditional system they hope to claw back some of their performance deficiency. It smacks of the bad old days when F1 was decided in court rooms more often than on race tracks.

It would be an extremely risky game to use the FIA's formal query system to get a rival's system banned whilst hoping to run your own version. If your version is successfully challenged at the start of the season, you'd be on the back foot right up until at least the European races if not later. Thus I feel that Ferrari are unable to get the system to work successfully and so are looking for a ban.
Or it could be that the systems described by Ferrari are of questionable legality and they wanted confirmation that the system would be allowed before they proceeded.

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dobbster71
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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Of course Ferrari are quite within their rights to question this type of suspension system. If it is deemed to be illegal then it has no place in F1.
Could Ferrari have requested clarification earlier? Of course, they could have done so before the end of last season, but why would they when they know that their closest competitors are designing their cars to incorporate this system? Far better to leave it as late as possible & to upset the plans of their competitors.
F1 is all about gaining a competitive advantage, as Merc did by running the system in 2016. Ferrari might just have gained a slight advantage here by getting this banned (my guess is that they won't have a comparable system ready for the 1st race but were considering introducing it later if it is not banned!) .
Furthermore, they may have evened-up the playing field & made the 2017 season more open & unpredictable than it might have been..........
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Pierce89
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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wuzak wrote:
Just_a_fan wrote:
KeiKo403 wrote:Is this Ferrari trying to curb Merc and RBR advantage or do Ferrari genuinely have a super complex suspension design that they want to check the legality of prior to running it and potentially getting disqualified?
This is Ferrari knowingly using the system to get the Merc/RedBull systems banned. Ferrari either haven't got the system or can't get their version to work well enough / in time. By making Merc/RedBull revert to a more traditional system they hope to claw back some of their performance deficiency. It smacks of the bad old days when F1 was decided in court rooms more often than on race tracks.

It would be an extremely risky game to use the FIA's formal query system to get a rival's system banned whilst hoping to run your own version. If your version is successfully challenged at the start of the season, you'd be on the back foot right up until at least the European races if not later. Thus I feel that Ferrari are unable to get the system to work successfully and so are looking for a ban.
Or it could be that the systems described by Ferrari are of questionable legality and they wanted confirmation that the system would be allowed before they proceeded.
How dare you act logical when someone is smearing the evil Ferrari?
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FW17
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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The trick suspensions of Mercedes and Red Bull that Ferrari wants banned



Charlie Whiting recently copied to the Formula 1 teams his reply to Ferrari’s query about the hydraulic activation of heave spring suspension systems (as used by both Mercedes and Red Bull in 2016).

Ferrari’s chief designer Simone Resta wrote the original letter to Whiting, saying that his team was considering introducing such a device, but wanted to know if it might be considered to contravene the regulations. For several years this has been the standard way for a team to flush out the legality of a system it believes might be conferring a rival an advantage. Whiting replied to Ferrari that he considered such a device would fall foul of regulation 3.15 (concerning whether a component or system is 'wholly incidental to the main purpose of the suspension system' or 'have been contrived to directly affect the aerodynamic performance of the car').

That is only the FIA technical delegate’s opinion, however, and doesn’t definitively make the device illegal. But it effectively invites any team to protest the technology to the stewards of a race who would likely be guided in their ruling by Whiting’s now-expressed opinion.

Effectively it leaves Mercedes and Red Bull in the invidious position of having to decide whether to continue with their trick systems – around which their cars will have been configured – or to play it safe and revert to a more conventional system, at least until the legality is definitively established.

So just what are these systems and how did they confer an advantage for Mercedes and Red Bull last year?

All contemporary F1 cars feature a lateral ‘third element’ heave spring across the front (and usually the rear too). This controls the car’s vertical stiffness. Because the aerodynamic loadings on the car are variable over the speed range, the heave spring is useful in decoupling loads imposed in cornering (to which it doesn’t react) from those imposed by the downforce working on both sides of the car (to which it does). It adds to the suspension stiffness when needed (at high speeds as the downforce loads increase dramatically) but remains neutral through cornering. All F1 cars have featured such springs for many years.

Where the Mercedes and Red Bull differed from the others last year was in how they combined the heave springs with hydraulic actuation. It allowed them to use the movement from the suspension to create hydraulic pressure that could effectively act as an energy store. This energy could then be used, when required, to manipulate the suspension in an advantageous way.

Since the banning of FRICS (front to rear interconnected suspension) midway through 2014, the front and rear suspension cannot be linked. But this allows some of the advantages of that system to be replicated. There is no ‘active’ element in that it is not powered (which has been banned since 1994). But intricate hydraulic valving within the heave springs allowed the suspension systems of the Red Bull and Mercedes to behave in a very specific pre-defined way.



How the system was used on each car was very different. Mercedes used it to maintain the car’s balance through a wide speed range of corners, by manipulating the car’s aerodynamic platform. Red Bull manipulated its platform rather differently – using it to enhance the effectiveness of its high static rake philosophy, by allowing the rear to sink back down once past a certain (pre-set) load threshold and thereby stalling the rear wing to boost straightline speeds.

Speaking with Paddy Lowe last year, he explained at least some of what Mercedes was trying to achieve. “The banning of FRIC has left us just trying to do things one end at a time and making springs and damper systems that will react to load in a more complex manner. A spring classically was linear but now we are playing with far greater and more complex ranges of non-linear compliance. That’s allowing us to play games with getting the aero platform exactly where we want. It’s more difficult to do than it was with FRIC but it’s the same thing really.

“We have a range of different things we do according to different circuits which have different demands. It’s playing a game between the aero and mechanical aspects of the suspension. It’s about maintaining balance at different aspects of the circuit at different cornering speeds. Getting the best from the aero platform and the best balance from high speed to low speed and indeed through different phases of the corner. All the teams playing more tunes than ever they used to. Our suspension therefore becomes more complex year on year. We’re not doing anything particularly tricky, it just gets more complex.

“If drivers from the past got into these cars they’d been mind-blown by how well balanced they are. We can build the car far more precisely and repeatably these days – and the degree to which we’re tailoring the aero and mechanical platforms almost corner by corner, or even within the corner through brake balance, all these different things, gives a car where you can get to point in the weekend where the drivers is saying, ‘There’s nothing to tune. It’s a perfectly balanced car.’ It’s not quite like that – because the tyre is moving around – but it’s vastly better to how it was 20 years ago when you had to take a really very crude approximation of getting a balance at as many corners as possible whilst accepting the others would be rubbish.”

Unlike the Mercedes, the hydraulic part of the Red Bull’s heave damper was not visible when in situ. But presumably would have been revealed when it was adjusted, thus explaining the great secrecy involved every time that happened. Mechanics would often form a human shield to keep prying eyes away – and the vanity panel flipped up vertically to visually block as much of the inner detail as possible.

But with a car featuring a high rake angle at standstill, the hydraulics could work in a way that allowed the rake angle to flatten out beyond a certain pre-set speed threshold. In that way the wing could be configured to stall as the rake angle decreased (and thereby the rear wing’s angle to the oncoming airflow), thereby boosting straightline speed, particularly valuable in a car with a power shortfall. It would allow you the advantages of enhanced downforce given by the rake angle but without much of the natural penalty of increased drag. It allowed Red Bull last year to run rake angles that hadn’t been seen since the days of the exhaust-blown diffusers. Such was the benefit of the hydraulic actuation that Red Bull even surrendered its former S-duct, as the hydraulic piping and accumulators didn’t leave enough room for the feature.



The question now that Ferrari has effectively caused the legality of such systems to be re-assessed is just how much performance its removal will cost Mercedes and Red Bull relative to the others. And relative to each other. Which of them was deriving more performance from it in their 2017 cars?

While it will almost certainly reduce the advantage of both cars over the rest, might it not also cost Red Bull more than Mercedes? Before this subject blew up, the jungle drums were suggesting that the aero gains made by Red Bull under the new regulations were truly spectacular. Was that through a more radical implementation of the hydraulic heave spring principle? In much the same way that the 2010 generation of twin diffuser cars were radically more extreme in the application of the principle than those of 2009?

--Mark Hughes

bill shoe
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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How delicious to have a tech controversy again!

The FIA defines legality (since FRIC ban) partially based on the imputed intent of the parts rather than simply their objective qualities. This makes it difficult to enforce (so Merc and RB ran it last year) and it remains difficult to enforce even with the new Technical Directive or clarification.

I understand the FIA's logic on an abstract level, but Oh-Mah-God how do they really intend to enforce it? Perhaps they'll convene an official FIA inquiry, put a suspension system in the witness chair, and then query it about its intent?

bill shoe
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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FW17 wrote:

“If drivers from the past got into these cars they’d been mind-blown by how well balanced they are. We can build the car far more precisely and repeatably these days – and the degree to which we’re tailoring the aero and mechanical platforms almost corner by corner, or even within the corner through brake balance, all these different things, gives a car where you can get to point in the weekend where the drivers is saying, ‘There’s nothing to tune. It’s a perfectly balanced car.’

--Mark Hughes
I humbly suggest that some current and highly regarded F1 drivers do not really have huge amounts of traditional car control ability because of this near-perfect balance. They are fast simply because they can take perfectly balanced cars on stunningly high-precision video-game-like laps.

When Seb and Webber were together at RB, perfect car balance meant Seb was untouchable, but a slightly weak car balance meant Webber was suddenly a bit quicker.

Then in Seb's last RB season against Riccardo the car was hardly a dog, it was merely not quite perfect. Ricciardo cleanly outpaced Seb all year long.

So, um, looking to Ricciardo's current RB teammate... It's apparently a young man named Verstappen who was quite successful in the perfect-balance 2016 Red Bull. But I would respectfully predict he'll take a step back in 2017 compared to Riccardo due to the new rule interpretation/clarification. Verstappen's driving style always looked a bit too dependent on precision (similar to Seb) rather than wringing speed from true car control.

Yes, precision in a perfectly balanced car is a legit way to be fast and successful, but it won't save you when you need to actually drive.

Silent Storm
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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Scarbs having a tough time explaining retards on twitter, these people just don't get what he is trying to say.

Mike B. ‏@vfc_cipher @ScarbsTech this is why I hate Ferrari

Craig Scarborough ‏@ScarbsTech @vfc_cipher why?

Mike B. ‏@vfc_cipher @ScarbsTech why make sure it's illegal? Why not eng. your own version and use the tech to level field? Renault did, didn't they?

Craig Scarborough ‏@ScarbsTech @vfc_cipher all teams check rivals legality, some 53 clarifications were issued last year. Its not just ferrari.

Mike B. ‏@vfc_cipher @ScarbsTech seems counterintuitive to me. On this particular one anyway. It's great tech that is easily replicated and would aid their car

Craig Scarborough ‏@ScarbsTech @vfc_cipher explain this "great tech, thats easily replicated" ?



Josh D. ‏@RacingHellphish @ScarbsTech banning innovation, one piece at a time.

Craig Scarborough ‏@ScarbsTech @RacingHellphish why is it innovation ?

Josh D. ‏@RacingHellphish @ScarbsTech a very unique, useful, and brilliantly thought out piece of hardware that no one saw coming. sounds like an innovation to me.

Craig Scarborough ‏@ScarbsTech @RacingHellphish a system designed to circumvent the rule, is that innovation? Like cycling blood transfusions or state rigged drug testing?

Josh D. ‏@RacingHellphish
@ScarbsTech Sounds more like a way to manipulate suspension physics than a cheat. More unique bike design, less doping.

Craig Scarborough ‏@ScarbsTech @RacingHellphish perhaps you misunderstand the system?

Josh D. ‏@RacingHellphish @ScarbsTech Not unlike a 'delayed recoil' mechanism. It stores energy via fluid to be released at a point that is more advantageous?

Craig Scarborough ‏@ScarbsTech @RacingHellphish why do they do that? Aero ride height control
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FW17
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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But with a car featuring a high rake angle at standstill, the hydraulics could work in a way that allowed the rake angle to flatten out beyond a certain pre-set speed threshold. In that way the wing could be configured to stall as the rake angle decreased (and thereby the rear wing’s angle to the oncoming airflow), thereby boosting straightline speed, particularly valuable in a car with a power shortfall. It would allow you the advantages of enhanced downforce given by the rake angle but without much of the natural penalty of increased drag. It allowed Red Bull last year to run rake angles that hadn’t been seen since the days of the exhaust-blown diffusers. Such was the benefit of the hydraulic actuation that Red Bull even surrendered its former S-duct, as the hydraulic piping and accumulators didn’t leave enough room for the feature.
There is an assumption that cannot be proven, that with stalling of the rear wing the heave spring is manipulated to stay down to enable a low drag configuration.

How can that be proved within regulations?

Just_a_fan
Just_a_fan
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Re: 2017 Formula 1 suspension designs

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wuzak wrote: Or it could be that the systems described by Ferrari are of questionable legality and they wanted confirmation that the system would be allowed before they proceeded.
It could be but if you were going to do that you'd probably want to do it early in the car's development, not a few weeks before it runs on track.

The timing suggests that it's been done against another team rather than for Ferrari.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.