I wonder if that swelling might have been the cause of Perez' bodywork failure in testing as well? IIRC it was that portion of the bodywork which was ripped away?
I wonder if that swelling might have been the cause of Perez' bodywork failure in testing as well? IIRC it was that portion of the bodywork which was ripped away?
This is wrong because the lines need to come from the point of vision (the camera) to the rear wing.RZS10 wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 16:21The upper part of the endplates move with the entire wing though?
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's a bit exaggerated here viewtopic.php?p=970967#p970967 but the difference between the blue and red line would show the change in AOA
Or here:
In the lower pic the red line is parallel to the ground.
in the upper pic the car has squatted, the red line was moved with it, the difference in AOA on the rear wing is between the red line and the blue one (which is now parallel to the ground.
https://s3.gifyu.com/images/image121f7d91ae3fcbf3.png
So you are telling us that the wing has infinite stiffness? Is it made of unobtanium?godlameroso wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 02:49I want to put this to bed. You people are literally mistaking the change in ride height at speed as a bending wing. I can show you all the physical proof to show you there's no bending wing whatsoever
I beg to differ. It's quite evident there's whole a lot more going on with the RB rw than the merc.
I think you misunderstood because we do not disagree ... the newer image shows the change of AOA due to the car squatting and THEN additionally you have the wing bending which was shown in the post i linked.SiLo wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 22:20*snip*
This is wrong because the lines need to come from the point of vision (the camera) to the rear wing.
The only reason we see a change is because there is a relative change between the camera and the rear wing. Squat has 0 impact on this change. I don't know what is so hard to understand about this.
Passing the test IS the legal determination.NathanOlder wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 23:46Am I right in thinking the RedBull wing is illegal even though it passes the test. As it still breaks the rule on bodywork flexibility. Are some people confusing the test as making it legal? Passing the test and being legal are 2 completely different things.
NathanOlder wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 23:46Am I right in thinking the RedBull wing is illegal even though it passes the test. As it still breaks the rule on bodywork flexibility. Are some people confusing the test as making it legal? Passing the test and being legal are 2 completely different things.
That’s the next chapter in the drama... There is potential for the teams to actually protest the rear wing and that will generate the debate on whether the ones (because RBR isn’t the only one with that flexes, may be the one with the most flex though) that are using this trick are infringing the rules in regards to movable devices and ask for penalties.NathanOlder wrote:Am I right in thinking the RedBull wing is illegal even though it passes the test. As it still breaks the rule on bodywork flexibility. Are some people confusing the test as making it legal? Passing the test and being legal are 2 completely different things.
Yes and no. The rule is that things shouldn't flex. But how do you check that? You define a test and if the test is passed then you are deemed to be complying. If the test itself is incorrect or incorrectly carried out, and you pass, then you "get away with it". The FIA can change the test, of course, and that might catch you breaking the rule. Either way, you're breaking the rule (you're illegal) but you just haven't been caught.NathanOlder wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 23:46Am I right in thinking the RedBull wing is illegal even though it passes the test. As it still breaks the rule on bodywork flexibility. Are some people confusing the test as making it legal? Passing the test and being legal are 2 completely different things.