The tires have 3x mass now as they did in 2010(Bridgestone slicks). The tires are bigger and heavier, which then requires bigger heavier rims, which in turn requires heavier brake rotors and then wheel hubs all of which required the front wheel tethers to be doubled up for safety and heavier suspension and steering components followed ultimately by stronger pickup points for the suspension to maintain stiffness, and then multiply that by 4 corners. Add in the ever increasing front and rear impact test requirements and then the big kicker the halo(and its beefier chassis requirements) and you have major mass increases.
How and why is the center of gravity not free to play with?jjn9128 wrote: ↑03 Nov 2019, 15:07
The front wing is always a flow conditioner for what follows, get it wrong and you can stall suspension/sidepods, prevent cooling, even destroy rear wing performance. Even when optimised, if you got rid of the front wing you'd gain more downforce at the rear of the car - however that car would be fundamentally unbalanced. Going back to the pre-83 cars firstly the wheelbase was really short, plus the car's were ~150kg lighter and the centre of gravity was free to play with. So you could engineer a balanced car by moving the floor's centre of pressure forward, so could often run without a front wing or just a small flap.
A key part of these rules is the role the rear wing plays in helping the wake to pass over another car - so you need a front wing to balance it. Team bosses also want a big surface to stick logos on
The left image was one we (turbof1) produced. I agree that cars are too long now, but I've always been a fan of the Gordon Murray mantra of "add lightness". Making a car shorter does do that to a small extent!mzso wrote: ↑07 Nov 2019, 00:20How and why is the center of gravity not free to play with?
Not sure having lighter cars is interesting ultimately, but I would prefer them being much shorter and responsive. They have the proportions of buses these days.
I think it was you who shared a picture how much longer today's cars are to even what they were some 10-12 years ago.
https://abload.de/img/2017-vs-2005aoky6.png https://abload.de/img/47452650_21161733151104jc8.jpg
Nope, these vastly more efficient engines require less cooling than the v8+kers, possibly even less than pre kers v8s. Even with the "charge coolers" the radiator surface area is less. Even with bigger cars look how much smaller the radiator inlets are. Wasted energy has been massively reduced with the v6PUs.
Aerodynamically they were always horrible. But while everything else became aerodynamic tires are still the horrible drag generators that they were in the fifties. Because: "We must have open wheels, no reason for it, but we must!"
What I'm trying to say is surely the cars don't have to be this big and heavy to cater for these tyres and such as cars of the past did so whilst being much smaller.mzso wrote: ↑07 Nov 2019, 13:28Aerodynamically they were always horrible. But while everything else became aerodynamic tires are still the horrible drag generators that they were in the fifties. Because: "We must have open wheels, no reason for it, but we must!"
As such they were also the major reason following/racing got so horrible. Teams started to create vortices to guide the front tire wake away from the rest of the car.
Yet it's the one thing they didn't touch aero-wise... How comical.
I think most of the lenght gained the past years are from the driver to the rear wheels, not the front.FW17 wrote: ↑07 Nov 2019, 14:35Does the wide front wing cause the length of the car to be longer?
DOes the wing have to be be further ahead of the front wheel to be efficient that in th regulations call for a increassed distance from the front wheel axis in comparison to the 2008 regulations ?
https://www.auto123.com/ArtImages/10419 ... ri-lat.jpg
Holm86 wrote: ↑07 Nov 2019, 14:42I think most of the lenght gained the past years are from the driver to the rear wheels, not the front.FW17 wrote: ↑07 Nov 2019, 14:35Does the wide front wing cause the length of the car to be longer?
DOes the wing have to be be further ahead of the front wheel to be efficient that in th regulations call for a increassed distance from the front wheel axis in comparison to the 2008 regulations ?
https://www.auto123.com/ArtImages/10419 ... ri-lat.jpg
Try and look at modern day engine covers, they are sooooo much longer.
And it makes sense as they try to increase the floor area