Am I seeing things, or does BAR have an additional linkage running along the axle center line to the chassis.
Check out these pictures from Hockenheim.
(slightly copper-coloured bar)
This is the older setup
FIA Technical Rules wrote: 11.1.3 Any powered device which is capable of altering the configuration or affecting the performance of any part of the brake system is forbidden.
The keels (single or twin) are there because the chassis of a F1 of the recent years is a lot higher than the point were the lower wishbones (that are about horizontal and starts in the lower part of the wheel rim) would end so you need a part low enough. Obviously if the chassis was lower (as it happens in almost all the single seater cars and was normal in F1 just few years ago) there wouldn’t be the need of the keel and the suspensions’ mounts are directly on the chassis.bernard wrote: By the way, the suggestion by Spencifer that the lower wishbones would infact be moulded inside the nosecone, thus eliminating the keel, both single and twin, seems very interesting... could this work in reality too?
Yes I know that, but what I'm after here is isn't it possible to mount the lower wishbones to the nosecone? The car being just as it is now, just mounting the lower wishbones higher.bernard wrote:
By the way, the suggestion by Spencifer that the lower wishbones would infact be moulded inside the nosecone, thus eliminating the keel, both single and twin, seems very interesting... could this work in reality too?
The keels (single or twin) are there because the chassis of a F1 of the recent years is a lot higher than the point were the lower wishbones (that are about horizontal and starts in the lower part of the wheel rim) would end so you need a part low enough. Obviously if the chassis was lower (as it happens in almost all the single seater cars and was normal in F1 just few years ago) there wouldn?t be the need of the keel and the suspensions? mounts are directly on the chassis.