A plane perpendicular to the front edge of the wing - I mis-typed The swept leading edge of the wing which is a line from 1225mm ahead of the front axle line on the centreline, and 1025mm from the front axle line at y1000mm from the centreline.
A plane perpendicular to the front edge of the wing - I mis-typed The swept leading edge of the wing which is a line from 1225mm ahead of the front axle line on the centreline, and 1025mm from the front axle line at y1000mm from the centreline.
Alright, that's how i read it aswell
Agree with you, it is very interesting to see different approaches in that area. And yes it will be very very very interesting to see which concept will be adopted by the teams. It could also be that the Ferrari/Torro Rosso approach works better in the first half of the year. But as soon as teams find rear downforce it could be hard for them to generate enough front downforce.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 19:21Changing the subject a bit, I'm really interested to know what is the solution that every team will converge to. With the past regulation, I believe Brawn was one of the first teams to introduce outwash as a means of controlling tyre wake in 2009, and that idea went all the way up to outwash tunnels with wide footplates, cascades with endplates swooping to the outside, sectioned elements to reinforce the Y250 vortex and so on and so on. Now I believe we have two main paths:
The more conventional one like Red Bull, with the outer section being as tall as possible to create something similar to the outwash tunnels, and the one from Ferrari, McLaren, Alfa and so one, that use the full 15 degrees of angle on the outer part of the wing, to try and throw the air outwards and create some outwash. I'm guessing that at the end of the year everyone will be using one of the two, my guess being the Ferrari solution, and until the end of next year I think we can expect some more clever solutions. I'm really curious to know what those will be.
Two less significant ideas I think may be interesting are Renault and Williams' cut out at the tip of the endplate, and also Williams using the adjustment plate to throw some air outwards, perhaps we'll see some combinations of these three solutions as time goes by.
I also think the way RBR and Merc built their frontwings this year generates much higher downforce on the front of the car compared to a lot of the other teams. For RBR it should be even more df because of much higher rake. Only problem is that you then have to deal with more wake further back on the car. But if you are able to manage that wake despite using the high df frontwing, it could well be the better approach in long term. For example better tyre wear.McMrocks wrote: ↑23 Feb 2019, 08:18This front wing for example has "almost" less than half of the frontal area of RB's front wing*.
*a bit less exaggerating: its probably still 65-75% of the frontal area
If there was so much of the wing missing last year, it was because the car had crashed.
It will be interesting to see if the teams which opted for the Ferrari approach have to revert to normal wing designs as the year goes on
The outwash on the front wings was more important than the double-deck diffuser in 2009 season!
I don't think the front wings will have much trouble balancing the downforce, mainly for two reasons: First of all, up until this year, only a fraction of the front wing was used for downforce. Most of it was there just to condition the flow and help create downforce with the floor and diffuser. Secondly because the front wing is even wider this year.McMrocks wrote: ↑23 Feb 2019, 08:18Agree with you, it is very interesting to see different approaches in that area. And yes it will be very very very interesting to see which concept will be adopted by the teams. It could also be that the Ferrari/Torro Rosso approach works better in the first half of the year. But as soon as teams find rear downforce it could be hard for them to generate enough front downforce.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 19:21Changing the subject a bit, I'm really interested to know what is the solution that every team will converge to. With the past regulation, I believe Brawn was one of the first teams to introduce outwash as a means of controlling tyre wake in 2009, and that idea went all the way up to outwash tunnels with wide footplates, cascades with endplates swooping to the outside, sectioned elements to reinforce the Y250 vortex and so on and so on. Now I believe we have two main paths:
The more conventional one like Red Bull, with the outer section being as tall as possible to create something similar to the outwash tunnels, and the one from Ferrari, McLaren, Alfa and so one, that use the full 15 degrees of angle on the outer part of the wing, to try and throw the air outwards and create some outwash. I'm guessing that at the end of the year everyone will be using one of the two, my guess being the Ferrari solution, and until the end of next year I think we can expect some more clever solutions. I'm really curious to know what those will be.
Two less significant ideas I think may be interesting are Renault and Williams' cut out at the tip of the endplate, and also Williams using the adjustment plate to throw some air outwards, perhaps we'll see some combinations of these three solutions as time goes by.
https://imgr3.auto-motor-und-sport.de/T ... 427965.jpg
This front wing for example has "almost" less than half of the frontal area of RB's front wing*.
*a bit less exaggerating: its probably still 65-75% of the frontal area
If there was so much of the wing missing last year, it was because the car had crashed.
It will be interesting to see if the teams which opted for the Ferrari approach have to revert to normal wing designs as the year goes on
It will be a great season engineering-wise,
Cheers
CriXus wrote: ↑23 Feb 2019, 16:19https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWRQDbB ... .be&t=2638The outwash on the front wings was more important than the double-deck diffuser in 2009 season!
Unable to view. What's his non-DDD explanation for why BrawnGP won in 2009?CriXus wrote: ↑23 Feb 2019, 16:19https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWRQDbB ... .be&t=2638The outwash on the front wings was more important than the double-deck diffuser in 2009 season!
Outwash front wing.roon wrote: ↑24 Feb 2019, 01:00Unable to view. What's his non-DDD explanation for why BrawnGP won in 2009?CriXus wrote: ↑23 Feb 2019, 16:19https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWRQDbB ... .be&t=2638The outwash on the front wings was more important than the double-deck diffuser in 2009 season!
Slightly disrespectful about someone who's achieved more in F1 than many. Sorting the front wing has a significant cascade effect down the whole length of the car so I see no reason to not believe him - he's seen the data after all... you know, actual numbers on the aerodynamic effect rather than "CFD eyes" and a vague feeling about what's important.gandharva wrote: ↑24 Feb 2019, 00:33https://i.kym-cdn.com/entries/icons/mob ... 19-238.jpgCriXus wrote: ↑23 Feb 2019, 16:19https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWRQDbB ... .be&t=2638The outwash on the front wings was more important than the double-deck diffuser in 2009 season!
But nonetheless interesting insights from an F1 dinosaur.
I remember at the time, when the teams and the media were getting very hot about the double diffuser, Brawn said in an interview trackside that "they're looking at the wrong end of the car" and smiled. As others had double diffusers at the start of the season, we can surmise that he was right.