Roger the knife wrote:One of the main quotes currently doing the rounds is the ability to increase the % front weight to work with the new Bridgestone slicks. My impression is that some cars last year were already running around the 50% front weight mark, so are we looking at a rear wheel drive car with a purposely designed distribution of obver 50% on the front? Expert analysis and comments would be most enlightening.
It´s quite intresting because you would think that as much weight as possible should be at the rearwheels since they have to put down all that power.
This is more of a guess from my side since I don´t have any real data to go on.
I believe there are two reasons that they would want to have more of the weight at the front.
First, with these extremly large front wing that will be used in combination with the smaler rear ones there will be a tendensy to get more grip in the front than previously on the f1 cars. Therefor the center of pressure will be moved forward in the car. Now to get a car that isnt oversteering the center of pressure must be behind the center of gravity to get stability. In other words if the car has a 45/55 weightdistrobution the balance and downforce pressure must be at <45 for the front and >55 at the back so that the car doesn´t turn by it self in the fast corners.
Since the new regulations are as they are with the downforcelevels maybe beeing 50/50 the weight disturbution must follow.
The second reason I belive is tyrewear and temperature. Having these new sticky tyres will give alot of grip in the slower corners both in entry and exit of the corners. Getting the rear tyres to heat up is not a big problem on the f1 cars, just be a little more aggresive on the throttle. On the front however you can´t go faster that the total amount of grip that can carry you through a corner and maybe it becomes quite hard to push the front tyres enough to keep the right heat in them. So what can you do?
Well, when you scrubb your hand to each other they become warm, and if you push them harder to each other it becomes warmer.
So by adding more weight to the front tyres (this is in slow speed corners where not alot of downforce plays in) they add more stress on the front and therefore more grip and tyre wear that would otherwise have eathen more of the reartyres.
Maybe something like that?
And by adding more weight on the front tyres the car naturally becomes more oversteer and it might suite them since they then can then also have a bit softer rearsprings or harder front ones.
Mattias