From that diagram alone, I don't think this would be such a hard thing to emulate. Sure, it would require repackaging, but...zibby43 wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 00:15https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2s7ScavfXwE
Nice, simple diagram/animation in this video.
oh, well on W11 they've already issued a TD to stop them cooling the tyres after the pressure test, and now quickly banned DAS for next year @MatthsMlw says, i suppose after having 6 months' notice. So if WIlliams' invention didn't survive that's no surprise! But presumably the new rule for NEXT year, instead of a TD, means W11 will get to keep DAS for this year, and make it a bit less likely the other teams will spend resource developing it, not a bad outcome
I presume if it gives any advantage or has the other big teams worried it gives Mercedes an advantage, it will be on other cars ASAP. Because this is a mechanical system, you can spend as much as you want on it without effecting the 2021 development (like in aero). Plus, it doesn’t look like a very expensive and complicated system.izzy wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 00:48oh, well on W11 they've already issued a TD to stop them cooling the tyres after the pressure test, and now quickly banned DAS for next year @MatthsMlw says, i suppose after having 6 months' notice. So if WIlliams' invention didn't survive that's no surprise! But presumably the new rule for NEXT year, instead of a TD, means W11 will get to keep DAS for this year, and make it a bit less likely the other teams will spend resource developing it, not a bad outcome
Nice! Gary is good at explaining things isn't he. No hydraulics...zibby43 wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 00:15https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2s7ScavfXwE
Nice, simple diagram/animation in this video.
Like Brawn huh? Everyone was so consumed with the double diffuser they didnt consider the front wing, I remember Ross commenting that for the pace of the car everyone was looking at the wrong end
yes it might just be a matter of time mightn't it, it'll be interesting to see, how many races W11 keeps the advantage and if it's opened the floodgates. A mechanical system as you say with no limits. Still, it must have to fit the car in various waysJolle wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 00:54I presume if it gives any advantage or has the other big teams worried it gives Mercedes an advantage, it will be on other cars ASAP. Because this is a mechanical system, you can spend as much as you want on it without effecting the 2021 development (like in aero). Plus, it doesn’t look like a very expensive and complicated system.
Changing the angles like that would be movable aerodynamics, as the steering arm would move in the airstream...PhillipM wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 00:11Because it's not a solid rod, the hydraulic ram is an integral part of that rack bar - so you'd have to add two seperate cylinders to the outside of that, and then you'd need even more length and a bearing to take the loads that would now be trying to twist your small outer cylinders. I don't think it's feasible for packaging, you'd have to take all of that out of your steering lock travel. Plus, as I said, it wouldn't fail 'safe'
It seems overkill when you're only altering the toe angles by 1-2mm.
I also can't see anything in the regulations that forbids the rack moving as claimed earlier, there's nothing in there apart from the rack and column passing crash tests to make sure the column doesn't spear the driver in a shunt.
Of course moving it forward would change the angle of the steering arms, that's the entire point, it would push the inners forwards and the outer joint further out, giving you the toe-out in corners and vice versa. And if anything fails all the usual steering forces are still being reacted normally and your rack probably just ends up stuck at one end.
I personally don't think so. I think what it means is, add DAS to the steering. The ruling seems to state not that you can't do it but that everything that adjusts the tires alignment (which I would say would be normal steering and toe adjustment) must be uniquely done (ie the only method allowed) via rotational change of the steering column.MtthsMlw wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 00:13No DAS next year?
https://i.imgur.com/IHOyky1.png
from the 2021 technical regulations.
Very easy to copy, much harder to integrate into an already made chassis - that's a tightly packaged area and you need the tie rods at the correct angles to start with too.