Wait, I thought the double pylon trend WAS all about AERO PERFORMANCE (supposedly better tilt control of the rear wing at high speed --> less drag), yes, it obviously comes at a cost of more airflow blockage, but the double pylon setup itself adds some extra weight relatively high up and outside of the wheelbase, so I don't get that side of the argument (is there any evidence of Mercedes bulking up the end-plates for the single support setup? Couldn't they just beef up their single pylon beam more?)zibby43 wrote: ↑28 Feb 2020, 22:44With the single pylon RW support, you free up more flow to the rear and gain some aero performance, at the expense of having to reinforce the end plates and adding some weight to make the single support sufficiently robust.
Will be interesting to see which route they ultimately go.
https://cdn.the-race.com/wp-content/upl ... erc-rw.jpg
The double pylon helps flow to the underside of the wing a bit due to how it attaches.HungarianRacer wrote: ↑29 Feb 2020, 13:59Wait, I thought the double pylon trend WAS all about AERO PERFORMANCE (supposedly better tilt control of the rear wing at high speed --> less drag), yes, it obviously comes at a cost of more airflow blockage, but the double pylon setup itself adds some extra weight relatively high up and outside of the wheelbase, so I don't get that side of the argument (is there any evidence of Mercedes bulking up the end-plates for the single support setup? Couldn't they just beef up their single pylon beam more?)zibby43 wrote: ↑28 Feb 2020, 22:44With the single pylon RW support, you free up more flow to the rear and gain some aero performance, at the expense of having to reinforce the end plates and adding some weight to make the single support sufficiently robust.
Will be interesting to see which route they ultimately go.
https://cdn.the-race.com/wp-content/upl ... erc-rw.jpg
That's Sam Collins he wrote for racecar engineering for years before running in the last UK general election for the Lib Dems... he's now back reporting on carsPlatinumZealot wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 00:49The new journalist is asking the right questions.. But i fear for him lol
Riiiight! He looks familiar!jjn9128 wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 00:52That's Sam Collins he wrote for racecar engineering for years before running in the last UK general election for the Lib Dems... he's now back reporting on carsPlatinumZealot wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 00:49The new journalist is asking the right questions.. But i fear for him lol
It's always a joy to listen to Allison. It seems like, he is not just a highly educated and accomplished engineer, but also very good at literature! He is more in the molds of Ross Brawn, who is extremely suave in his vocabulary and style of explaining things and very smart. Haven't seen many other like them.zibby43 wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 00:06Great little interview with James Allison (thanks to peke_f1).
Interesting comment from Allison, when asked how he feels about the car compared to the end of testing last year: "We're more secure with our performance."
Part 2 (deals with testing recap, generally)
https://streamable.com/5zrqd
Part 1 (deals with DAS)
https://streamable.com/9eg3o
Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiight ...Mercedes unsure if it will run DAS in early races
Why, exactly?
During the second week of testing they started comparing consecutive laps in which the driver used or not the DAS to understand its true advantages, that's why I think they will continue trying it for few races, and then they'll decide if continue using it or not.wesley123 wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 13:30Why, exactly?
They haven't used it all that often in testing either. afaik Bottas' fastest lap was without DAS. Outside of that, just like anytime anyone does anything interesting, it is interpreted as the holy grail, when no one has any idea how good it really is, or if it really has any actual use whatsoever.
We don't know how much time it is actually worth track by track and it carries a weight penalty, media are overhyping this system like its a silver bullet but if it was then Mercedes would've definitely kept it quiet until Australia.