Singapore2008 wrote: ↑06 Dec 2019, 14:15
No, that's not what I was trying to say. I will try again...
I think we agree that a car needs as much downforce as possible with as less drag as possible.
I believe that adding more and more winglets (like on top of the sidepods of last years McLaren) is not the best way to go. It means you have to redirect the airflow in an (dragwise) expensive way.
But like said, downforce is more detrimental to laptime than drag is, so downforce is pretty much always the way to go. So, those winglets are the way to go. They extend the possibility for improvement where other areas cannot.
Also, that they increase drag by itself doesn't mean they increase overall drag. They often improve aero in other parts of the car, taking drag away in these areas.
Your view also is flawed when you consider that the team that went all the way on downforce with little concern of drag won both championships even more dominantly than they did in 2017 and 2018.
It seems to me the Red Bull engineers try to solve there problems with as little winglets etc. as possible. Preferably by FW en bargeboard changes.
They also start every year on the back foot so far, so you'll have to question how much that has really brought them. You also become dependant of the winglets to push your aero further than it could normally go.
Example; The current trend in F1 is to have the airflow 'roll' off the sidepod. This is desirable because airflow over the sidepod generally creates lift. They are reliant on the winglets and all the elements in these areas to allow this effect to happen and prevent airflow detachment. Thus these winglets allow more downforce, for essentially zero drag.