Anyone interested will have a paintbox easily capable of manipulating colour and pattern, so it is to get a little more talk on social media.Manoah2u wrote: ↑06 Feb 2019, 17:03i personally don't think it's that functional, really.
the good eyes, let's take guys like newey for example, who know how stuff works, will only have to wait when the car exits or returns to their stall and look at important parts and see what's going on. as for photography, it doesn't do that much either. yes it slightly hides some curves around the sidepods but that's really about it. as for the rest, there's nothing that a little enhancing, brightening and following outlines won't fix. it just takes an hour or so of photoshop skills and you're there.
hence i personally believe it has much more to do with hyping rather than anything else.
many times, even when cars are in their full livery testing, it's even hard to make out all the curves and shapes. look at how those complicated bargeboards of noawadays are obstructing views behind. yet at the same time, all you need is a few angles and you can figure stuff out.
if you'd ask me, i think teams would do better by creating flowviz that is transparant and only lights up when you light an UV light on it or through an UV filter. but then youd also make it unneccesary more difficult for yourself too, so, what's the use.
NathanOlder wrote: ↑06 Feb 2019, 21:28The cars stay the same colour but allow for sponsors. If Sauber were white, and Pepsi said we will sponsor you 25mill a year but we want the car blue, then what happens ? Pepsi walk away ? The cars have to change, just like the vest in the Olympics do.
Jolle wrote: ↑06 Feb 2019, 23:20Special cameo or dazzle painting for testing is pure for markering, to get some extra attention. "in the good old days" when testing was really just testing, most cars were even unpainted. With modern tech I think it's quite possible and not too expensive to 3D scan a rivals car while it's moving on track, obstructed paint or not.
Old fashion team/country colours would be nice, but not really of these times. The few teams that still use their original colours have more to do with their main sponsor for Mercedes that is Daimler and Ferrari with, well... Ferrari.... and McLaren should be green... not orange. It would mean a lot of green cars on track actually.
for the right colours:
Mercedes (GER): while or silver, red numbers
Ferrari, Toro Rosso: (IT): red, white numbers
RedBull (AUT): Blue, black on white numbers
Sauber/Alfa (SWI): Red, White bonnet and black numbers
Renault (Fra): Bleu, white numbers
McLaren, Racing Point, Williams GB: Green, white numbers
HAAS (USA), White, blue stripes and blue numbers.
Looking at the list, Hamilton's car is spot on, The Ferrari's are still correct as well and RedBull isn't far off. And if the new Alfa team will paint their car red with a white airbox, that will be pretty close too! McLaren just should move the team's licence to The Netherlands (not even a bad idea with Brexit? ) and they look good in orange!
No, I'm with you there. At least on F1 cars.Big Tea wrote: ↑07 Feb 2019, 00:29Jolle wrote: ↑06 Feb 2019, 23:20Special cameo or dazzle painting for testing is pure for markering, to get some extra attention. "in the good old days" when testing was really just testing, most cars were even unpainted. With modern tech I think it's quite possible and not too expensive to 3D scan a rivals car while it's moving on track, obstructed paint or not.
Old fashion team/country colours would be nice, but not really of these times. The few teams that still use their original colours have more to do with their main sponsor for Mercedes that is Daimler and Ferrari with, well... Ferrari.... and McLaren should be green... not orange. It would mean a lot of green cars on track actually.
for the right colours:
Mercedes (GER): while or silver, red numbers
Ferrari, Toro Rosso: (IT): red, white numbers
RedBull (AUT): Blue, black on white numbers
Sauber/Alfa (SWI): Red, White bonnet and black numbers
Renault (Fra): Bleu, white numbers
McLaren, Racing Point, Williams GB: Green, white numbers
HAAS (USA), White, blue stripes and blue numbers.
Looking at the list, Hamilton's car is spot on, The Ferrari's are still correct as well and RedBull isn't far off. And if the new Alfa team will paint their car red with a white airbox, that will be pretty close too! McLaren just should move the team's licence to The Netherlands (not even a bad idea with Brexit? ) and they look good in orange!
Ah yes. I am also the only brit who does not like racing green
Perhaps it's just a method of making you look at the paintwork assuming something clever is being done with the aero when in actual fact they are using it as a cover for some clever suspension or the likeGrandAxe wrote: ↑07 Feb 2019, 04:20My personal preference is for the previous colour scheme. The camo is ok for testing - nothing more. But maybe I'm boring, who knows.
The camo is striking, but it can only fool the eyes, not technology.
Other teams can simply photograph the cars using filters for infrared and other wavelengths to cut out the camouflage; or use a structured light camera like the kinect etc to get a depth map.
Part of the problem is that there is no "British Racing Green" colour. It doesn't have a colour code that you can punch in and replicate. Different cars / teams over the years have had variations of green and some combinations work better than others. Of course, it's really "Irish Racing Green" as it was chosen to honour Ireland where the 1903 Gordon Bennet race was held - racing being illegal in England at the time.
well, that, and offcourse Toto Wolff is british. Ah no, he's austrian.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑07 Feb 2019, 10:33Part of the problem is that there is no "British Racing Green" colour. It doesn't have a colour code that you can punch in and replicate. Different cars / teams over the years have had variations of green and some combinations work better than others. Of course, it's really "Irish Racing Green" as it was chosen to honour Ireland where the 1903 Gordon Bennet race was held - racing being illegal in England at the time.
These are all "British Racing Green". I rather like the modern interpretation on the DBR9.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... 777%29.jpg
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... XKD403.JPG
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... n_DBR9.jpg
I'd like to see the WO10 in the green used on the DBR9. That would be a nice thing, in my view, and would honour the fact that the Mercedes team is British in everything but title.
A huge percentage of the people who design and build the cars are British. The factories are both in Britain. Much like RedBull. STR is, at least, in Italy and mostly staffed by Italians as is Ferrari.Manoah2u wrote: ↑07 Feb 2019, 14:32
well, that, and offcourse Toto Wolff is british. Ah no, he's austrian.
Lauda atleast is british. Ah no, he's austrian too.
Ok ok, so the engine is british since it's from brixworth. Oh wait, it's essentially Ilmor, Mario Illien's brainchild, so that would make it swiss? It's owned by Mercedes-Benz though.