ThanksJef Patat wrote:The holes in front of the rear wheel are not for sealing the floor, they are there to manage tire squirt. Do a google search for that term and you'll find quite a lot
http://scarbsf1.com/?p=4560
I remember seeing remnants of flow vis under the diffuser left side only (Sky sport slow motion shot in Q2) Unfortunately I have no images of thatJef Patat wrote:Another one from the new rear wing:
I only spot a piece of black paintjob and maybe a different curve on the lower front edge?
https://twitter.com/alo_pumpa/status/850793525084135424Jef Patat wrote: ↑08 Apr 2017, 21:15Another one from the new rear wing:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C83PysFXkAAkSwS.jpg
I only spot a piece of black paintjob and maybe a different curve on the lower front edge?
I don't think those are different. There's a slightly different angle. The green arrow shows the black edge of the main pain but due to the angle it's not visible in the lower pic. Just take the 'n' of MacLaren as a reference. The yellow arrow I doubt very much, I think it's lighting. Here's one from Melbourne for reference.GoranF1 wrote: ↑08 Apr 2017, 21:33https://twitter.com/alo_pumpa/status/850793525084135424Jef Patat wrote: ↑08 Apr 2017, 21:15Another one from the new rear wing:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C83PysFXkAAkSwS.jpg
I only spot a piece of black paintjob and maybe a different curve on the lower front edge?
McLaren brought a new floor to Shanghai, characterised by a meter-long longitudinal slit. Basically, this serves to isolate the air flowing under the car so the diffuser can work more efficiently. A similar opening can be found on the Mercedes, Ferrari, Toro Rosso, and Red Bull, albeit in a different shape for the latter.
The rationale is the same as the floor slots ahead of the rear wheels, i.e to allow high-pressure air above the floor to go under the car in order to seal the edges of the diffuser.
How does it work? The encounter between low-pressure and high-pressure air generates a vortex that acts as a wall to protect the diffuser from the dirty wake of the rotating rear tyres.
Sealing the diffuser’s edges is all the more important this year with teams running higher rake angle on their 2017-spec cars, which is especially true of the McLaren-Honda MCL32.