TRICKLE69
YES,YES, and yes. Don't care whose right and whose wrong. Next.
If you don't care who is right or wrong, why are you on a technical forum?sprint car76 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2019, 18:42TRICKLE69
YES,YES, and yes. Don't care whose right and whose wrong. Next.
What are true experts in your opinion and what kind of facts do you expect? Official data from Mercedes on how the RW behaves on their car?TRICKLE69 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2019, 19:21Because I want to see and learn about the technical parts of the car. If there are true experts on here that have facts to back up what they are saying and explain that's fine. I just see a lot of back and forth between people who have no real idea what they are talking about and just argue their points with little to no facts to back them.
For me to personally take anything posted in the forum as an unquestionable fact, and not merely the opinion (educated or otherwise) of a fan I would require the following.
https://www.f1technical.net/articles/TRICKLE69 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2019, 19:21If there are true experts on here that have facts to back up what they are saying and explain that's fine. I just see a lot of back and forth between people who have no real idea what they are talking about and just argue their points with little to no facts to back them.
Well summarized.DiogoBrand wrote: ↑28 Feb 2019, 07:20About the rear wing:
There seems to be clear indication of flow separation, but to me that either means they're getting it to stall down the straight to decrease drag, or it's what NoDivergence said, when you can actually get more downforce with a given AoA, even though you're getting flow separation.
There are two things that don't let me believe it's unintentional:
1 - A team with as much expertise in aerodynamics as Mercedes, or any F1 team for that matter, really wouldn't get that ridiculous amount of separation if they didn't want to.
2 - If they were losing so much downforce from that as some people here seem to think, the car wouldn't survive the first high speed corner without the rear of the car overtaking the front.
Would it not be easier to just run a smaller rear wing (less downforce) and thus benefit from less drag?Sierra117 wrote: ↑28 Feb 2019, 06:52Assuming the simplified FW is producing less downforce and the rear wing being larger producing more potential downforce, is it possible they are trying to find a balance between the benefits of high AOA/large wing while at the same time shaving off excess downforce by way of intentional separation? #noobSessions