Didn't people claim that the Merc rear wing was "cornering" last season or 2019? I think it was Silverstone ...
Is the new test just aiming at the tilt backwards or also around the center when looking from above?
Yeah, our good buddy Nugnes did, so take it with a grain of salt.
"In order to ensure that the requirements of Article 3.8 are respected, the FIA reserves the
right to introduce further load/deflection tests on any part of the bodywork which appears to
be (or is suspected of), moving whilst the car is in motion."
In this article it mentions using cameras to monitor the behaviour of the wings.zeffman wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 09:22In addition to more stringent static loading tests, could the new tests planned to prevent wing displacement also include some kind of real-time monitoring of wing movement during the race weekend? If the FIA mandated the placement of fiducials on the rear and front wings in standard locations then it might be possible to measure deflection (noise notwithstanding) using the standard cameras (or perhaps with additional standard sensors) and altert the teams when limits are exceeded significantly.
This would be subject to some difficulties (noise, lighting, signal loss, wing damage due to crashes etc..) but the FIA already use real-time monitoring of multiple car parameters during the race weekend.
You can add the Ferrari video too. If you take the exhaust pipe as a reference - which is as distant the the T-cam as the RW-, it doesnt move, while the wing does, a lot. So no parallax effect here. #flexing_wing
Ok i was wrong, it's less and the wing just isn't flapping about as much as the others.
Great post, it illustrates the point perfectly and the last GIF explains how the suspension travel is not related to the rear wing movement.RZS10 wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 14:09Just completely ignore the sharkfin, it's is a but not the relevant reference point, the lines are 'fixed' to the camera, the camera is fixed to the chassis, so the only movement can be that of parts that aren't rigidly attached to it, which is the wheel and suspension assembly and any part which can flex, which in this case are the wings which is very clearly visible in the footage.
https://i.imgur.com/nQ7HWRg.png
I doubt good ol' Giorgio would mind me using his old sketch.
Top pic - car at low speed, not squatted.
2nd pic - car squatted at high speed, rigidly attached non-flexing wing, the red line 'moves with the squat' if you will - the blue line was the old one before squatting.
3rd pic - wing tilting via support pillar around point 1
4th pic - wing tilting via attachment point to support pillar around point 2
From the footage i'd say that McL, Merc and Alpine are more point1, RBR is a mix of 1&2.
Another little thing
https://i.imgur.com/y3Lrjaa.gif
p.s.: i wish i was as confident in being blatantly, provably and objectively wrong ... lol
Ferrari isn’t a “low rake car” and doesn’t show as much flexing as the others (RBR, Alpine)... Even Mclaren shows less flexing from all the footage we’ve seeing so far... Williams isn’t a “low rake car” and doesn’t show flex like others.godlameroso wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 14:47Umm Ferrari, Alpine, McLaren ALL exhibit the same exact behavior, why would all high rake cars behave the same? Gee I wonder if high rake cars all squat at speed. Short memories guys you already forgot Ferrari testing in 2019.NathanOlder wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 13:33I am focusing on what I am seeing, and thats long before you arrived with your new theory. I feel it's you that is focusing on the finger and not what everyone else is pointing at. If your theory was correct, then more cars would 'appear' to flex as much as RedBull, why would they be any different. I think you are wrong here like you were with the RB16b's pace in the last race.godlameroso wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 12:54
Have you tried it? I get it's in fashion to contradict me, Hamilton fans live up to his message of understanding and inclusivity, truly makes me feel like we race as one!
Even better if you have a go pro, or small camera you can mount. Then everything is fixed on the same perspective. Post results I don't mind being wrong. So far I show logic and reasoning behind my opinion, use as many facts as possible. Avoid he said she said stuff, like quoting an entire Matt Sommers article that has nothing to do with the issue at hand.
I have a feeling you're focusing on my finger and not what it is pointing at.
It's an added effect, the AOA on the wing will get lowered with the squat already, an additional flex then lowers it even further.
It will compound the effect... If the wing would be rigid, the car “squatting” on the straights would make the wing change it’s angle of attack since the whole car is pivoting rearwards, the car “pivots” around the front suspension since it is stiffer (doesn’t squat) as much as the rear suspension does.
All f1 cars squat under aero load. If the front and rear squated an equal amount The AOA would stay constant relative to the oncoming air flow.
Are you kidding? I don't mind a bit of trolling but the Ferrari wing moves nearly the same as the RB one. The shark fin tip and the rear wing flap are displaced very similarly.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 16:12Ferrari isn’t a “low rake car” and doesn’t show as much flexing as the others (RBR, Alpine)... Even Mclaren shows less flexing from all the footage we’ve seeing so far... Williams isn’t a “low rake car” and doesn’t show flex like others.godlameroso wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 14:47Umm Ferrari, Alpine, McLaren ALL exhibit the same exact behavior, why would all high rake cars behave the same? Gee I wonder if high rake cars all squat at speed. Short memories guys you already forgot Ferrari testing in 2019.NathanOlder wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 13:33
I am focusing on what I am seeing, and thats long before you arrived with your new theory. I feel it's you that is focusing on the finger and not what everyone else is pointing at. If your theory was correct, then more cars would 'appear' to flex as much as RedBull, why would they be any different. I think you are wrong here like you were with the RB16b's pace in the last race.