Scotracer wrote:There are some serious misconceptions going on in this thread.
Namely, the front-wing is less susceptible to loss of efficiency when following a car than the rest of the car. Anecdotal evidence from the drivers would suggest this is happening
but the OWG's wind-tunnel results tell a different story. It was realised that:
Racecar Engineering Vol18 #11 wrote:At the front of the car the front wing was found to be contributing a similar downforce component to that of the diffuser (roughly 37%. But, being less sensitive to wake than the rear end made it contribute more in wake. This is counterintuitive as we often hear of drivers suffering understeer when following another car. This is probably the net loss in downforce they are feeling, rather than specifically frontal downforce.
This shows that it's the
rear of the car that is the problem, not the front. Removing the front-wing would also create incredible imbalances in the loading on the car as the front would be subjected to 0N downforce (or even negative downforce...aka lift) whilst the rear would have over 20000N of downforce - making the car near undriveable.
I dunno. I think if the A arms became solid wings, the splitter could be channeled to produce an incredible amount of cantilevered downforce.
I think it would look better than these wings, and I would maybe allow a front facing cover appendage to the brake ducting to act like a front fender with 35% coverage of the front tyre.
But whatever, it will never happen now. This is like the end of the cold war. All of the passion to be the best is gone in the face of financial crisis, but it is all BS. There will ALWAYS be a market for the BEST. Maybe Bernie and Max should keep that in mind as the endlessly screw with F1, because any series that is NOT the best is very subject to termination by irrelevancy.
The best NEVER has to worry about that bullet.