jjn9128 wrote: ↑16 Dec 2019, 21:34
Team bosses didn't like the bargeboards, too much broken surface makes it difficult to put big stickers on the car. Same reason the tops of the rear wing endplates are now gone - from some angles they blocked the sponsor logo on the mainplane.
The function of the bargeboard is basicaly fulfilled by the new floor fences, namely vortical flow to slightly enhance downforce and some outwash of the front tyre wake.
https://qd1pqw.db.files.1drv.com/y4mGGJ ... pmode=none
Coming soon to the front page, maybe in a month or two!
In theory yes. However those fences and the side wings won't be nearly as powerful nor will they generate the same loads generated by the bargeboards. The biggest challenge I see is getting the aero to not stall too much under yaw. The bargeboards mitigate this to a huge degree which is a big chunk of where the lap time comes from.
Much like the front wing compromises that were made to try to retain some of the performance, it may just have unintended consequences. I see what you're saying about team bosses and the logos, it is a commercial sport in the end. My worry comes from the fact that if you take away the bargeboards, then you are taking away from the smaller teams, as their bargeboards brought big performance, and they were semi modular. Teams had a lot of scope for development in that area, and the way they were built, they weren't a huge expense relatively speaking.
Without them, and other parts of the car more restricted, it will still favor the bigger teams. Why? Because bigger teams have better suspension parts, they have better aero in the critical areas that the regulations haven't and can't address. Because bigger teams can afford more compact and streamlined packaging of the equipment, and that equipment sits in front of the most critical area for downforce production on the whole car.