turbof1 wrote: ↑25 Nov 2019, 11:41
It appears that GPS data is not everything. It is also why aero data on F1 cars are being kept more secured than the crown jewels of England. So it is telling that even top teams don't have a confident guess on that front about the competition.
To me this is itself a conundrum and a fascinating insight. Team's are not lacking photographic evidence of their competitors cars, and photogrammetry is pretty good these days, so it seems to me reasonable that teams could get to a static model of their competitors cars visible aerodynamics without extreme effort.
Taken that as given, it seems there is something prohibitively complex between applying their in-house simulation tools to models of competitors cars, and obtaining an estimation of their aerodynamic performance.
Could it be; limitations on CFD time? the parts of the cars not able to be photographed? the presumed deflection of these parts under load that is not statically able to be photographed? or the size of the error bars on the the output of these reverse engineering efforts?
It's long been a question of mine how much money/time/effort teams spend on studying their competitors, I wonder if this episode speaks to that.