Nowhere near. They don't blow the floor with the sidepods and look at the amount of heat rejected there.Gui59 wrote:Even with a larger dissipator at the end of the pipes?
EBD wasn't about heat, it was about the energy/velocity of the exhaust gases.
Nowhere near. They don't blow the floor with the sidepods and look at the amount of heat rejected there.Gui59 wrote:Even with a larger dissipator at the end of the pipes?
It was more about the exhaust gasses being very high velocity rather than simply hot. Sidepod or heat exchanger flow cannot be used to replicate that effect.Gui59 wrote:I through EDB used hot air to seal the sides of the diffuser
I think in general we have seen far less substantial upgrades in pre-season testing so far then many expected. I think most teams are still at the stage where they very much focus on understanding what they have.f300v10 wrote:With one day of testing to go, the only new aero elements we know of that were not on the car at launch but seen in testing are:
1) the spoon wing which was run one afternoon during the first week and not seen again
2) the three element monkey seat on the car one day earlier this week
So as some of us predicted, the front wing, rear wing, floor, diffuser and turning vanes were not 'basic launch parts'. I'm sure the aero team is working around the clock back in Italy, and may produce a few minor updates that will be seen in Melbourne. But the car shown on launch day will be very similar to the first race spec.
Looks like the exact same picture of the exact same thing... go through it winglet by winglet and i think you will agree.THRAK wrote:Also some minor changes in the winglets extravaganza at the sides of the diffuser (right = previous version). Well, not 100% sure about the highest detail, but the lowest one is definitely new.
http://i65.tinypic.com/2s8ql3b.png
With testing reduced to only 2x4 days, I believe many teams choose to keep all the good stuff for first race. Red Bull used to show true spec parts on last two or even the very last day of testing, back when it was 3x4 days. Since many teams still talk of Barcelona race as a place for "radical" new parts (not just small changes in geometry), I'd expect them to show up with some new front and rear wings with minor changes until that race, like you say.f300v10 wrote:So as some of us predicted, the front wing, rear wing, floor, diffuser and turning vanes were not 'basic launch parts'. I'm sure the aero team is working around the clock back in Italy, and may produce a few minor updates that will be seen in Melbourne. But the car shown on launch day will be very similar to the first race spec.
But think about 2016 cars - particularly the Red - and you'd be hard pressed to see a lot of changes from the start of the season to the end. The PU was improved massively and, almost certainly, so was the suspension; these translated to big performance gains but to the naked eye there wasn't a lot different.Vanja #66 wrote:With testing reduced to only 2x4 days, I believe many teams choose to keep all the good stuff for first race. Red Bull used to show true spec parts on last two or even the very last day of testing, back when it was 3x4 days. Since many teams still talk of Barcelona race as a place for "radical" new parts (not just small changes in geometry), I'd expect them to show up with some new front and rear wings with minor changes until that race, like you say.f300v10 wrote:So as some of us predicted, the front wing, rear wing, floor, diffuser and turning vanes were not 'basic launch parts'. I'm sure the aero team is working around the clock back in Italy, and may produce a few minor updates that will be seen in Melbourne. But the car shown on launch day will be very similar to the first race spec.