yes!
Etymology
μονός (monós) + τόνος (tónos)
Adjective
μονότονος • (monótonos) m (feminine μονότονη, neuter μονότονο)
(music) monotonous, flat
dull, boring
i hope everybody knew this
It just means that as x increases y also has to increase. So steer left (could steer right like a tiller but provided y increases with x) then both the wheels have to go left and the inverse. This toe mechanism steers the wheels in opposite directions, so not monotonic. It's a word I used in my PhD so it has some function in engineering .izzy wrote: ↑29 Feb 2020, 20:13maths is abstract isn't it, it's something you apply in engineering. and when i look up 'monotonic' it doesn't seem to have anything to do with a racing car whatsoever! Why would anybody use that word in F1 regulations? if they actually wanted them to be clearjjn9128 wrote: ↑29 Feb 2020, 18:43You're suggesting engineering isn't maths!?izzy wrote: ↑29 Feb 2020, 17:54i don't know why they used that strange word 'monotonic'. When i look it up it's about maths, not engineering. I'm taking @Xwang's idea as something like they could pull a lever to engage a toe-changing mechanism that then they drive by rotating the steering wheel for a second, still in its normal plane
sometimes i think FIA write the rules in this convoluted way specially to let teams hunt for ways round them!
Ah okay so it can reverse, when the steering wheel x variable reverses? this is a slightly different definition again! i'm beginning to lose count but you know what i'm going to say now doncha?jjn9128 wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 00:45It just means that as x increases y also has to increase. So steer left (could steer right like a tiller but provided y increases with x) then both the wheels have to go left and the inverse. This toe mechanism steers the wheels in opposite directions, so not monotonic. It's a word I used in my PhD so it has some function in engineering .
For the steering it means that any incremental movement of the steering in one direction must always move the steered wheels in the same direction as any other incremental movement in that direction. It doesn’t mean that both the steered wheels must move the same amount. Normally, because of various kinematic features, such as Ackerman, the wheels don’t move the same amount.5.5.3 At any given engine speed the driver torque demand map must be monotonically increasing for an increase in accelerator pedal position.
Ah okay, well that's good to know, it's quite a nice word once you get used to it, and yes Ackerman is what i was speculating then. Tho there's that clause saying the inboard ends of the track rods have to stay the same distance apart now, that doesn't seem easy to get roundhenry wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 10:59Monotonic is already in the regulations. It’s been there for years.
For the steering it means that any incremental movement of the steering in one direction must always move the steered wheels in the same direction as any other incremental movement in that direction. It doesn’t mean that both the steered wheels must move the same amount. Normally, because of various kinematic features, such as Ackerman, the wheels don’t move the same amount.5.5.3 At any given engine speed the driver torque demand map must be monotonically increasing for an increase in accelerator pedal position.
I think that in 2021 the teams could use a similar mechanism to DAS that would provide a further, variable, kinematic adjustment to the front wheel alignment. A sort of programmable Ackerman. They would be restricted to only using rotary movement of the steering wheel to drive it.
If you move the track rod ends in planes vertical to the bulkhead they might stay the same distance apart but change their location in relation to the hub steering arm, and hence realign the wheels. whether that’s useful or worthwhile, given the monotonic restriction, would need some studies.izzy wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 11:17Ah okay, well that's good to know, it's quite a nice word once you get used to it, and yes Ackerman is what i was speculating then. Tho there's that clause saying the inboard ends of the track rods have to stay the same distance apart now, that doesn't seem easy to get roundhenry wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 10:59Monotonic is already in the regulations. It’s been there for years.
For the steering it means that any incremental movement of the steering in one direction must always move the steered wheels in the same direction as any other incremental movement in that direction. It doesn’t mean that both the steered wheels must move the same amount. Normally, because of various kinematic features, such as Ackerman, the wheels don’t move the same amount.5.5.3 At any given engine speed the driver torque demand map must be monotonically increasing for an increase in accelerator pedal position.
I think that in 2021 the teams could use a similar mechanism to DAS that would provide a further, variable, kinematic adjustment to the front wheel alignment. A sort of programmable Ackerman. They would be restricted to only using rotary movement of the steering wheel to drive it.
The “only translate in Y”nremoves the opportunity to adjust toe by moving in the plane at right angles to the bulkhead. I think that change makes the rules bullet proof.MtthsMlw wrote: ↑11 Mar 2020, 19:49Updated 2021 tech regs
Makes it quite clear.
https://i.imgur.com/HCF8ZSv.png
That is what i am saying from the beginning and its what Newey pointed but then he kept quiet.apexcontrol wrote:it isnt legal. at 300km the aero change is huge.
https://drivetribe.com/p/aerodynamics-o ... rnTlzA-XCQ
I think wheels are exempted from Aero rules. Otherwise all cars are ilegalbluechris wrote: ↑11 Mar 2020, 23:05That is what i am saying from the beginning and its what Newey pointed but then he kept quiet.apexcontrol wrote:it isnt legal. at 300km the aero change is huge.
https://drivetribe.com/p/aerodynamics-o ... rnTlzA-XCQ
I believe RedBul will play the aero card when they see how they compare to Mercedes, then but bye DAS.
Even though Mercedes i think don't need DAS to be dominant this year again.
I am worried, seeing at their track record, that the W11 is indeed dominant even without DAS. But every bit helps.bluechris wrote: ↑11 Mar 2020, 23:05That is what i am saying from the beginning and its what Newey pointed but then he kept quiet.apexcontrol wrote:it isnt legal. at 300km the aero change is huge.
https://drivetribe.com/p/aerodynamics-o ... rnTlzA-XCQ
I believe RedBul will play the aero card when they see how they compare to Mercedes, then but bye DAS.
Even though Mercedes i think don't need DAS to be dominant this year again.
Interesting article. Says nothing about the legality of the DAS system.apexcontrol wrote: ↑11 Mar 2020, 20:37it isnt legal. at 300km the aero change is huge.
https://drivetribe.com/p/aerodynamics-o ... rnTlzA-XCQ
Newey says "aero" because that's what he is famous for. RedBull are hoping that Newey's reputation for aero will blind the stewards from looking at the actual situation. "Newey says it's aero and everyone knows he's a God" type response, in effect.bluechris wrote: ↑11 Mar 2020, 23:05That is what i am saying from the beginning and its what Newey pointed but then he kept quiet.apexcontrol wrote:it isnt legal. at 300km the aero change is huge.
https://drivetribe.com/p/aerodynamics-o ... rnTlzA-XCQ
I believe RedBul will play the aero card when they see how they compare to Mercedes, then but bye DAS.
Even though Mercedes i think don't need DAS to be dominant this year again.