Just_a_fan wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 23:24
dans79 wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 22:09
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑20 Apr 2021, 20:52
Such holes are illegal so how are they getting holes through scrutineering?
The regulations are gibberish, so I could see there being some type of loophole.
To me it looks like these openings aren't passing through the floor. To me it look like they might be tunnels (for lack of a better term) between the floor and the plank, and I think that might be legal.
However that would just mean they are somehow diverting air from one spot under the floor to another.
A tunnel would be a hole in the regulations because holes are breaks in a defined surface. The surfaces are defined by the rules and may not include any fully enclosed holes. A tunnel is just a pipe that has a fully enclosed hole at each end. Where the tunnel meets the defined surface, a hole is created.
Ergo, it's illegal.
when the rules talk about the holes, they are referring to the floor mainly and holes passing through a reference plane.
this is all under article section 3.7
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... -03-05.pdf
for example 3.7.10
a
In an area lying 450mm or less from the car centre plane, and from 450mm forward of
the plane C-C to 350mm rearward of the rear wheel centre line, any intersection of
any bodywork visible from beneath the car with a lateral or longitudinal vertical plane
should form one continuous line which is visible from beneath the car
B
In an area lying 800mm or less from the car centre plane, and from 450mm forward of
the plane C-C to 175mm forward of the rear wheel centre line, any intersection of
any bodywork visible from beneath the car with a lateral or longitudinal vertical plane
should form one continuous line which is visible from beneath the car.
c
All bodywork that is visible from beneath the car and less than 50mm above the
reference plane, within 250mm of the car centre plane and situated behind a line
175mm ahead of the rear wheel centre line, must produce only a single, continuous
curve when intersected with any horizontal plane
Imo, the floor and the plank would both pass this test, as they are two separate components. They would only form a tunnel when joined together, and i think even then they might pass the test. Not to mention when you look at the holes you aren't going to see any other bodywork.
What I question, is what the benefit of them would be.