SiLo wrote: ↑25 May 2021, 16:42
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If I was to guess it would be this. For me, it's obvious it's by design, and creating a wing that flexes a lot less wouldn't cost £500K, but they have thrown that figure out to make some noise about it being bad for the sport.
Ironically ignoring the fact that they likely spent millions figuring out how to get the wing to flex but not be detected during the FIA tests.
I say it is designed to pass the test and that's obvious for every team. I think of this whole situation this way. If the scoring system at school is that you get an A if you score 93+ on a test where 100 is the full score, your goal is to score at least 93 points on your test. Bob consistently getting 98 and looked at Jake who's consistently scoring 93 and both getting an A at the end. Bob decided that 93 should not be an A and demand that 98 should be an A.
Politics aside, the cost may be as high as what Horner quoted or less. The simple thing is to beef up the structure so it does not flex and I think that's what everyone is focused on. I would say, everyone will focus on the new test and make sure they pass the new test just. On the other hand, the correlation of the car when it is designed obviously take the flex into consideration. What that means is that if the rear wing no longer flex at a certain speed, then the design has to change to find a new compromise between drag and downforce. They may have to change other parts to move the air differently because the wing is not tilting back as much. There is always impact as most of the aero devices does not work all on its own.The air move from the front to the back and rear wing is at the very end, you want to make sure the air gets there correctly. That's probably where all the cost comes from.