Doesn't the area between behind the front wheels and the sidepods look way too clean compared to other cars?
Not that the Ferrari had a lot of stuff going there last year, but the difference is striking.
Why would that be? Thanks!
Then every team's number 1 priority for this season must have been to have an as big as possible airbox with as slim as possible sidepods?PhillipM wrote: ↑15 Feb 2019, 23:38Rear wing is way more inefficient than the diffuser even with it being higher and wider, it's one of the draggiest parts on the car in isolation - the only time driving the rear wing hard is good is if you need to do so to link the flow to the diffuser to get the floor working properly.
You can only do so much slimming, part of the fun is ensuring the critical areas aren't stagnating under turns. Partly why the curved diffusers work so well, and why we are seeing Sauber style front wings. Smart cookies these f1 guys.
We will see more development there. They just didn't even bother to cover the diffuser during launch.
True, Ferrari seems to be the only team clearly going for a smaller airbox. The question is why. I can't really imagine that they were the only ones among all the others that weren't able to properly seal the floor and diffuser, hence compensating it by directing much air towards RW, as has been pointed out as a possible reason here. If that actually was the reason then they shouldn't have championship ambitions as it would kind of be an enforced solution rather than a sophisticated and balanced one.
Is it possible that we're looking at a High Downforce rear wing? The sort of stuff we'd look at in Mexico or even Monaco. You know, just to mess with people's mind. Yes, the front doesn't look like it, but this car is not going to hit the track as is.NathanOlder wrote: ↑16 Feb 2019, 00:19@LM10
Or as slim as possible for both. Recent times have seen the sidepods being slimmed down with airbox size going up to help achieve the minimal sidepod size.
Maximum downforce, minimal drag and a balanced car. Downforce is king but not with the high drag the rear wing creates, thats why we see small levels of wing on the rear at a lot of tracks. Especially if a team has the diffuser working well like RedBull.
Of course, instead of having difficulties sealing floor and diffuser, maybe, in fact, they're confident about the downforce their diffuser will generate and will generally use slimmer RWs than their opponents. And if they need high downforce configurations, they will have a quite effective usage of the RW because of the smaller airbox.warpomex wrote: ↑16 Feb 2019, 00:29Is it possible that we're looking at a High Downforce rear wing? The sort of stuff we'd look at in Mexico or even Monaco. You know, just to mess with people's mind. Yes, the front doesn't look like it, but this car is not going to hit the track as is.NathanOlder wrote: ↑16 Feb 2019, 00:19@LM10
Or as slim as possible for both. Recent times have seen the sidepods being slimmed down with airbox size going up to help achieve the minimal sidepod size.
Maximum downforce, minimal drag and a balanced car. Downforce is king but not with the high drag the rear wing creates, thats why we see small levels of wing on the rear at a lot of tracks. Especially if a team has the diffuser working well like RedBull.
LM10 wrote: ↑16 Feb 2019, 00:23True, Ferrari seems to be the only team clearly going for a smaller airbox. The question is why. I can't really imagine that they were the only ones among all the others that weren't able to properly seal the floor and diffuser, hence compensating it by directing much air towards RW, as has been pointed out as a possible reason here. If that actually was the reason then they shouldn't have championship ambitions as it would kind of be an enforced solution rather than a sophisticated and balanced one.
AMuS tells that the SF90 has a 7 cm longer wheelbase than last year's car. And less rake.jumpingfish wrote: ↑15 Feb 2019, 18:01I'm not sure I did it correctly, photos were taken at different angles a bit. It seems wheelbase shorter than SF70h Can anyone make a comparison too? https://pp.userapi.com/c849024/v8490241 ... kMXSlk.jpg
Good point.dans79 wrote: ↑16 Feb 2019, 01:02You need to stop looking at everything in such extremes. It's not black or white, it's one of the many shades of grey in between.
LM10 wrote: ↑16 Feb 2019, 00:23True, Ferrari seems to be the only team clearly going for a smaller airbox. The question is why. I can't really imagine that they were the only ones among all the others that weren't able to properly seal the floor and diffuser, hence compensating it by directing much air towards RW, as has been pointed out as a possible reason here. If that actually was the reason then they shouldn't have championship ambitions as it would kind of be an enforced solution rather than a sophisticated and balanced one.