Just_a_fan wrote: ↑26 Nov 2020, 02:01
godlameroso wrote: ↑26 Nov 2020, 01:37
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑25 Nov 2020, 21:47
I wonder whether the high rake cars are more effective at low speeds than the low rake cars or vice versa. No idea why they are or even should be, of course.
Would you want high rake at low speeds? What if your wheelbase is relatively long? I'm sure there's a level of rake and wheelbase right for every range of speeds.
That's the question - would you want high or low rake at low speed? Red Bull change their rake angle with speed, it appears, by clever tuning of the suspension. No doubt others do the same thing. After all, you generally don't want lots of downforce at 300km/h because you don't corner at that speed. So dropping the rear reduces downforce. Might that suggest they would be better at lower speeds?
You probably want whatever is going to give you the most downforce at low speeds. If your wheelbase is longer would it serve you to have more rake, or could you get away with less? Then you have to consider the aero balance, do you want the COP to be in front of the COG at low speeds where mechanical grip matters more to get the car to turn in? Then as load builds the COP shifts back?
Hamilton claims Mercedes has made a step with getting the car to rotate at lower speeds, perhaps they shift the center of pressure forward at low speeds, then it shifts back at speed so they can exit the corners.
A higher rake car with a shorter wheelbase is probably harder to get the COP to move just right, because it's shorter, so less room for error, with a longer car you can get away with misplacing the COP slightly more than with a shorter car.