El Scorchio wrote: ↑04 Jun 2021, 09:49
ispano6 wrote: ↑04 Jun 2021, 08:22
zibby43 wrote: ↑04 Jun 2021, 07:13
Yeah and with new regulations coming, and the cost to develop a front wing, there is a 0.00% chance anything is done about front wings.
Shark fin wobble is irrelevant. It's just a side effect of making that material as thin as possible.
And that makes it OK? Surely Mercedes is capable of making something that is thin but does not flap like a flag?
Well yes, it does make it ok. Just like Red Bull and other teams’ flexing wings have been ok up until now until they came under scrutiny of the FIA. Just because you personally don’t like another team’s shark fin (probably for no other reason than because it’s not on a Honda powered car and is on a rival car) doesn’t mean there’s anything wrong with it.
Let’s talk about shark fins IF they become relevant to the conversation- I.e. someone within the sport whose opinion matters queries them, because they WILL at some point if there’s any more substance to it other than people on a forum waving the finger. Otherwise there’s zero point in going down that road
Pretty much took the words off of my fingertips.
To add, I've yet to see a single compelling argument as to what the benefit of the wobbly shark fin would be, considering its primary purposes are providing laminar flow to the RW and helping stabilize the car in yaw conditions.
I can see an argument for a stiffer shark fin making those other two metrics more predictable/beneficial, but at the expense of some extra weight/girth/drag.
If there was a significant performance benefit from making the fin as large and as wobbly as possible, every single team would be doing it. With the RW, several teams have pushed the limits with respect to flexibility because the performance is there. Other teams had the capacity to do the same, but decided the risk-reward benefit of pursuing that option was not worth it.