They just perfected the other design. Maybe they’ll have more difficulties with the other one. There must be a reason they waited that long with changing their sidepod concept (supposing they actually changed it).
They just perfected the other design. Maybe they’ll have more difficulties with the other one. There must be a reason they waited that long with changing their sidepod concept (supposing they actually changed it).
Most likely time constraints. If they truly cut way back on the 2019 cars development after the summer break, that probably gave them the time and computational resources they needed to do the re-design.
Not really convinced about it, Mercs sidepod last year wasn't all that different; Both solutions increased the space between sidepod and front wheel.LM10 wrote: ↑13 Dec 2019, 19:59Probably there is no more big gain potential in the conventional sidepod concept. So sooner or later they needed to go this way.MtthsMlw wrote: ↑13 Dec 2019, 19:25High sidepods finally? Last team yet to adopt this solution.
https://twitter.com/ScarbsTech/status/1 ... 3213262848
It looks like a seating buck made out of jabroc
Once again my question from last week:
Why would they put the top SIPS lower than usual for no reason though?Little Newms wrote: ↑15 Dec 2019, 11:23Guys sorry to burst the bubble but has anyone noticed that the tub is exactly the same as the one Karun has his seat fitting in when he drove the 2019 car earlier this year? Exactly the same side pods, air intake size and so on.
Highly unlikely it’s the 2020 tub you see...
Little Newms wrote: ↑15 Dec 2019, 11:23Guys sorry to burst the bubble but has anyone noticed that the tub is exactly the same as the one Karun has his seat fitting in when he drove the 2019 car earlier this year? Exactly the same side pods, air intake size and so on.
Highly unlikely it’s the 2020 tub you see...
Mercedes seem to use pretty soft ARBs anyway, so I don't think that max torsional stiffness is not what they think they need.timbo wrote: ↑15 Dec 2019, 15:19Irrespective of whether or not the tub is from 2020 car, I wonder, why would they make those recesses in the tub itself? Yes, I get that the radiators can be brought more inboard, but to get the same structural strength, more material would be required, so there is a weight penalty. Couldn't they make the tub shorter? Or simply make it narrower at the bottom altogether?
The length is as much about making the body above the floor long and narrow. That maximises airflow to the rear floor and over the top of the diffuser.
... And a longer, more progressively shrinking airbox and engine cover can lower the drag coefficient aswell.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Dec 2019, 15:48The length is as much about making the body above the floor long and narrow. That maximises airflow to the rear floor and over the top of the diffuser.
The Bottom engine mounting points are just 22cm away from the center line. Everything more outboard isn't important for car stiffness. Of Course there is a fuel tank structural test from underneath, but I don't think that one is a big Problem.timbo wrote: ↑15 Dec 2019, 15:19Irrespective of whether or not the tub is from 2020 car, I wonder, why would they make those recesses in the tub itself? Yes, I get that the radiators can be brought more inboard, but to get the same structural strength, more material would be required, so there is a weight penalty. Couldn't they make the tub shorter? Or simply make it narrower at the bottom altogether?