I wonder if the have a DAS suspension and a sans-DAS suspension they can quickly plugin
If stewards rule illegal do they swap or lock in place
I wonder if the have a DAS suspension and a sans-DAS suspension they can quickly plugin
I would suspect that they have those bases covered already. I think they would assume it's a given that someone will officially protest, and though it appears the FIA might allow it, they would have to be ready just in case.f1jcw wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 15:43I wonder if the have a DAS suspension and a sans-DAS suspension they can quickly plugin
If stewards rule illegal do they swap or lock in place
FIA is separate from race stewards, that’s the problemAirshifter wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 16:26I would suspect that they have those bases covered already. I think they would assume it's a given that someone will officially protest, and though it appears the FIA might allow it, they would have to be ready just in case.
Not really, because technical matters can be appealed and it'll end up at a FIA tribunal.f1jcw wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 16:42FIA is separate from race stewards, that’s the problemAirshifter wrote: ↑01 Mar 2020, 16:26I would suspect that they have those bases covered already. I think they would assume it's a given that someone will officially protest, and though it appears the FIA might allow it, they would have to be ready just in case.
How does it stack against the other cars from this angle? The tightest? No?
not sure, she looks pretty chubby in the center section.
It's seriously impressive. The extra floor space visible in the overhead shot, starting at the front of the side pods on the W11, compared to the SF1000, is pretty striking (viewtopic.php?f=12&t=28777&start=450).
A longer car helps With the tighter rear obviously, but they pay the extraweight and mechanical umbalancezibby43 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2020, 22:50It's seriously impressive. The extra floor space visible in the overhead shot, starting at the front of the side pods on the W11, compared to the SF1000, is pretty striking (viewtopic.php?f=12&t=28777&start=450).
Ferrari's is not as tight, as they still have a fair amount of their cooling equipment in the side pod region. Instead, Ferrari have a smaller, triangular roll hoop intake and larger shark fin surface area (both of those design choices work together in terms of freeing up flow toward the RW).
Merc is really wanting to force air downward to the rear of the floor and rear diffuser.
You can easily offset that weight by innovating with lighter materials elsewhere. There have been some credible "rumors" from someone that works at Merc GP that say the W11 is significantly lighter than the W10, and they have loads of ballast they can play with all over the car.mmred wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 00:24A longer car helps With the tighter rear obviously, but they pay the extraweight and mechanical umbalancezibby43 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2020, 22:50It's seriously impressive. The extra floor space visible in the overhead shot, starting at the front of the side pods on the W11, compared to the SF1000, is pretty striking (viewtopic.php?f=12&t=28777&start=450).
Ferrari's is not as tight, as they still have a fair amount of their cooling equipment in the side pod region. Instead, Ferrari have a smaller, triangular roll hoop intake and larger shark fin surface area (both of those design choices work together in terms of freeing up flow toward the RW).
Merc is really wanting to force air downward to the rear of the floor and rear diffuser.
Sure, but compared to a shorter Mercedes car with the same materials technology you still have extra weight and less balance in sharp turns.zibby43 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 00:29You can easily offset that weight by innovating with lighter materials elsewhere. There have been some credible "rumors" from someone that works at Merc GP that say the W11 is significantly lighter than the W10, and they have loads of ballast they can play with all over the car.mmred wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 00:24A longer car helps With the tighter rear obviously, but they pay the extraweight and mechanical umbalancezibby43 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2020, 22:50
It's seriously impressive. The extra floor space visible in the overhead shot, starting at the front of the side pods on the W11, compared to the SF1000, is pretty striking (viewtopic.php?f=12&t=28777&start=450).
Ferrari's is not as tight, as they still have a fair amount of their cooling equipment in the side pod region. Instead, Ferrari have a smaller, triangular roll hoop intake and larger shark fin surface area (both of those design choices work together in terms of freeing up flow toward the RW).
Merc is really wanting to force air downward to the rear of the floor and rear diffuser.
A lot of variables affect balance.mmred wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 01:30Sure, but compared to a shorter Mercedes car with the same materials technology you still have extra weight and less balance in sharp turns.zibby43 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 00:29You can easily offset that weight by innovating with lighter materials elsewhere. There have been some credible "rumors" from someone that works at Merc GP that say the W11 is significantly lighter than the W10, and they have loads of ballast they can play with all over the car.
Technology Is a given