No idea. _I_ have not even seen it verified that even Ferrari has more than one oil tank.voltmod wrote: ↑29 Jul 2017, 18:42The article also says that Mercedes has a couple of oil tanks. Is it true?hurril wrote: ↑29 Jul 2017, 12:10This article also mentions having found oil residue in the gasoline. Is that really the case? This is the first I've seen that is that specific.SiLo wrote: ↑29 Jul 2017, 11:35http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... ml?block=1
Report that Ferrari have been banned from some trick with the blown axle when the car is in yaw. Can someone translate?
I'm far from being an expert but I've read quite a few similar proposition from fans over the years when Mercedes (crazy complex surfaces)/Redbul (blown diffusor)/Mclaren (Fduct)/Brawn (double diffusor) came up with various creative design solutions, and overtime the answer has been "it's not as easy as slapping on new pieces, it has to fit the philosophy of the car".NathanOlder wrote: ↑30 Jul 2017, 13:45Quick question, are the sidepods on this car regarded as a big piece of their performance ? There was a lot of talk early on in the season about the shape of the side pods and the openings.
What I'm getting at is , if the side pods are a performance gain, then will Ferraei lose out next year as everyone will copy?
Did it?godlameroso wrote: ↑02 Aug 2017, 15:13Making a change like that to the floor isn't so simple, the transmission case had to be redesigned.
I can't find a picture at the moment, but I believe the gearbox housing has been clear of the floor in that area since the launch.godlameroso wrote: ↑03 Aug 2017, 02:52No it's not, but the space in the area of the floor was altered, and in order to accommodate the new shape, things must be moved around further up the chassis. There is no centimeter on the car that isn't occupied, so if that area was changed, everything up to the rear axle had to be modified to accommodate it. It's not a complete redesign but a tweak, still it's not as easy to do as it appears, you'd be very surprised.
Willem Toet suggested that the side-pods give Ferrari better management of air around the side-pods, and hence to t the coke bottle area, and also better air flow into the side-pod. meaning more down-force to the rear and less drag from the cooling openings.Mat-tes wrote: ↑30 Jul 2017, 17:05I'm far from being an expert but I've read quite a few similar proposition from fans over the years when Mercedes (crazy complex surfaces)/Redbul (blown diffusor)/Mclaren (Fduct)/Brawn (double diffusor) came up with various creative design solutions, and overtime the answer has been "it's not as easy as slapping on new pieces, it has to fit the philosophy of the car".NathanOlder wrote: ↑30 Jul 2017, 13:45Quick question, are the sidepods on this car regarded as a big piece of their performance ? There was a lot of talk early on in the season about the shape of the side pods and the openings.
What I'm getting at is , if the side pods are a performance gain, then will Ferraei lose out next year as everyone will copy?
Overtime other teams did managed to copy those solutions, but never really to the same potential as the original design.
Ferrari pretty much redesigned all of it's car around this I would assume, so that would make other teams take a very big risk of restarting from zero while other continue refining their philosophy from 2017 onward.
And even if they do, Ferrari with a year of constant running with that solution might come up with an even more radical design next year.
Unlike a "simple" aero solution, this works in tandem with a specific packaging of the engine and other components, plus I'd assume having things much further back also impacts the overall weight distribution of the car.
So, maybe some team will try it out, we'll see next year.