Great Sketch and the exhaust will be probably roted soething like that. but push-rod rear suspension? No way.roon wrote: ↑06 Feb 2018, 21:18Wild speculation time! I say the W09 sports a pushrod rear suspension. The raised exhaust pipe is to clear suspension components. Pullrod rear suspensions may be a vestige of the '09-'12 formula, wherein pullrods benefitted the beam wing and high radiator exits. With beam wings and high radiator exits no longer presents, perhaps the pullrod is no longer the optimal solution. Relocating the suspension components higher may allow for more space below the gearbox and behind the engine i.e. more free space above and before the diffuser. Pardon the quality of the sketch, I didn't have a table for this one!
https://i.imgur.com/956UcGi.jpg
https://twitter.com/ideaeon/status/960963926849548289
Maybe just the complete opposite. By having the wishbones raised as high as possible, there could be some beam wing effect or positive effect on the rear of the car. Combined with this extra height, a pull-rod will work more effective due to the better angle. The reason pull-rod suspensions don't work at the front anymore, is the small difference in top of the upright and the bottom of the chassis.FrukostScones wrote: ↑08 Feb 2018, 11:40Great Sketch and the exhaust will be probably roted soething like that. but push-rod rear suspension? No way.roon wrote: ↑06 Feb 2018, 21:18Wild speculation time! I say the W09 sports a pushrod rear suspension. The raised exhaust pipe is to clear suspension components. Pullrod rear suspensions may be a vestige of the '09-'12 formula, wherein pullrods benefitted the beam wing and high radiator exits. With beam wings and high radiator exits no longer presents, perhaps the pullrod is no longer the optimal solution. Relocating the suspension components higher may allow for more space below the gearbox and behind the engine i.e. more free space above and before the diffuser. Pardon the quality of the sketch, I didn't have a table for this one!
https://i.imgur.com/956UcGi.jpg
https://twitter.com/ideaeon/status/960963926849548289
https://www.f1today.net/en/news/f1/2357 ... t-mercedesToto Wolff has admitted Mercedes is pushing the development of its 2018 car to the limit.Italy's Corriere dello Sport claims that with Ferrari and Red Bull closing in, Mercedes has pushed the limits with the performance parameters of the new car.
The report says several exhausts have broken on the test rigs at Brixworth during race simulations, apparently due to vibrations emitted by a shorter and smaller gearbox.
Team boss Wolff said: "Nothing ever goes completely to plan, because you're always trying to explore the limits and make the car as light as possible. But I would say that we had a good winter. There were no big dramas even if the stress is always there," he added. (GMM)
I agree, the pullrod arrangement at the rear may have better kinematics. For a pushrod to have similar motion they may need to maximize the distance between the upper and lower mounting points of the pushrod: the lower extremity of the upright, and a bellcrank pivot located as high as possible. Such a taller stack of components may explain the kink in the exhaust pipe, which led to my drawing.Jolle wrote: ↑08 Feb 2018, 13:49Maybe just the complete opposite. By having the wishbones raised as high as possible, there could be some beam wing effect or positive effect on the rear of the car. Combined with this extra height, a pull-rod will work more effective due to the better angle. The reason pull-rod suspensions don't work at the front anymore, is the small difference in top of the upright and the bottom of the chassis.FrukostScones wrote: ↑08 Feb 2018, 11:40Great Sketch and the exhaust will be probably roted soething like that. but push-rod rear suspension? No way.roon wrote: ↑06 Feb 2018, 21:18Wild speculation time! I say the W09 sports a pushrod rear suspension. The raised exhaust pipe is to clear suspension components. Pullrod rear suspensions may be a vestige of the '09-'12 formula, wherein pullrods benefitted the beam wing and high radiator exits. With beam wings and high radiator exits no longer presents, perhaps the pullrod is no longer the optimal solution. Relocating the suspension components higher may allow for more space below the gearbox and behind the engine i.e. more free space above and before the diffuser. Pardon the quality of the sketch, I didn't have a table for this one!
https://i.imgur.com/956UcGi.jpg
https://twitter.com/ideaeon/status/960963926849548289
Merc did pioneer the conjoined front-lower wishbone, maybe they've done the same to the rear-upper wishbone. This could also explain a raised-and-forward pickup point. A coinjoined arm located in the middle of where a triangular arm normally would be. Combined with the +/-10* AoA allowance, perhaps you are on to something. A single large arm protruding through the bodywork, able to sweep through 20* total degrees of AoA. Only downside is it must have a vertically-symmetrical cross-section.
I had a similar thought in 2014/2015 Remember the Williams FW-16...roon wrote: ↑08 Feb 2018, 19:33Merc did pioneer the conjoined front-lower wishbone, maybe they've done the same to the rear-upper wishbone. This could also explain a raised-and-forward pickup point. A coinjoined arm located in the middle of where a triangular arm normally would be. Combined with the +/-10* AoA allowance, perhaps you are on to something. A single large arm protruding through the bodywork, able to sweep through 20* total degrees of AoA. Only downside is it must have a vertically-symmetrical cross-section.
https://cdn-1.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... detail.jpg
If it isn't just some testing-spec exhaust fabrication, nor related to suspension design, maybe there is something new to the exhaust and turbine set-up.
i suspect that geometry litteraly would make the car destroy the tyres ( and not only ) for the lateral friction present even on the straight caused by the movement of the wheels that tend to go closer to the gearbox with accellerationroon wrote: ↑10 Feb 2018, 00:20Another take on what might be under that raised exhaust pipe, inspired by Scarbs' and Jolle's comments: A raised and conjoined rear upper control arm.
https://i.imgur.com/rT7qK7w.jpg
https://twitter.com/ideaeon/status/962087833660895232
Uncanny resemblance, Blackout!
current (2015) mclaren solution on the rightPlatinumZealot wrote: ↑10 Feb 2018, 19:41The geometry won't destry the tyres if the kinematics are good. It's not hard to relocate the pick up points and retain good kinematics.