First and foremost you can just look at the wing and see it's not a high DF wing. Look at the end plates/uprights compared to Monaco. Look at the shape and layout of the baku wing compared to Monaco.
I was talking about this circuit, Baku, not about overall.I think you will find that Horner meant the wing they ran was "medium/high DF" for this specific circuit, not overall.
Wouter wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 20:30dans79 wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 17:52First and foremost you can just look at the wing and see it's not a high DF wing. Look at the end plates/uprights compared to Monaco. Look at the shape and layout of the baku wing compared to Monaco.
https://cdn-1.motorsport.com/images/amp ... ar-win.jpg
The first wing up here called Baku wing wasn't the wing Max used during the race.
This wing was only tested during FP1. Photo from FP1 :
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E2-EpVOXwAM ... name=small
Here is the race wing:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E2-AcBwWYAQ ... name=large
I was talking about this circuit, Baku, not about overall.I think you will find that Horner meant the wing they ran was "medium/high DF" for this specific circuit, not overall.
You might note that the wing shown in the illustration [from @Dans79] also has a section cut away on the trailing edge of the upper flap.
However, whilst that version of the wing made an appearance, it didn’t actually find its way onto the car in a competitive session in Baku but will likely return at the Belgian GP.
this perennial myth is of course utter rubbish
It is not utter rubbish, if there is no flex the pressure on the contact points keeping the wing together would be much greater. Flex certainly helps in a wing not breaking from air pressure. It is not rubbish. Just how much flex is needed, how strong can those connections be engineered. Likely very little flex is actually needed. So it is not rubbish, but also not that critical, to have some flex.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑10 Jun 2021, 11:09this perennial myth is of course utter rubbish
(unless a rigid mass is hitting the wing)
since air is essentially non-rigid
wing flexibility may well increase the stress in the wing even when it doesn't cause change of AoA
if the rate of change of the air load is close to the rate of change of wing internal force with deflection
as a car's suspension spring force increases after going over a bump
flex can only make a wing more likely to break from air pressure ....Sieper wrote: ↑10 Jun 2021, 15:22..... Flex certainly helps in a wing not breaking from air pressure. It is not rubbish. Just how much flex is needed, how strong can those connections be engineered. Likely very little flex is actually needed. So it is not rubbish, but also not that critical, to have some flex.
Paying to make an official protest? protesting in accordance with the code? Does that even exist? Is it not done through the media?
Note to team finance office. Do not allow cost cap to prevent appeal. ( 6K in an envelope in the draw maybe )peaty wrote: ↑12 Jun 2021, 13:25Paying to make an official protest? protesting in accordance with the code? Does that even exist? Is it not done through the media?
P.S:Jokes aside...Altough it looks like things have change a bit lately (at least for "some"), in theory...yes (article 17? of the sporting code). Protest 2000 euros and appeals 6000 euros.
Red Bull also added a gurney flap to this wing model.Wouter wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 20:30dans79 wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 17:52.
First and foremost you can just look at the wing and see it's not a high DF wing. Look at the end plates/uprights compared to Monaco. Look at the shape and layout of the baku wing compared to Monaco.
https://cdn-1.motorsport.com/images/amp ... ar-win.jpg
The first wing up here called Baku wing wasn't the wing Max used during the race.
This wing was only tested during FP1. Photo from FP1 :
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E2-EpVOXwAM ... name=small
Here is the race wing:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E2-AcBwWYAQ ... name=large
I was talking about this circuit, Baku, not about overall.I think you will find that Horner meant the wing they ran was "medium/high DF" for this specific circuit, not overall.
I think so too. MB Probably they knew a protest wouldn’t be successful and probably had more flexible wings in the stock room, so to speak and just thought for this weekend if you can’t beat them, join them. RB probably knew the same but played it a bit safer just in case.Sevach wrote: ↑12 Jun 2021, 15:02Red Bull also added a gurney flap to this wing model.Wouter wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 20:30dans79 wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 17:52
.
First and foremost you can just look at the wing and see it's not a high DF wing. Look at the end plates/uprights compared to Monaco. Look at the shape and layout of the baku wing compared to Monaco.
https://cdn-1.motorsport.com/images/amp ... ar-win.jpg
The first wing up here called Baku wing wasn't the wing Max used during the race.
This wing was only tested during FP1. Photo from FP1 :
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E2-EpVOXwAM ... name=small
Here is the race wing:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E2-AcBwWYAQ ... name=large
I was talking about this circuit, Baku, not about overall.I think you will find that Horner meant the wing they ran was "medium/high DF" for this specific circuit, not overall.
I'm also thinking both teams largely converged, Mercedes flexing a little more, Red Bull a little less (than before), Red Bull still pushing the boundaries a bit more.
So funny that it’s such a nominal amount with all the money in the sport. Probably the equivalent of buying a chocolate bar for most of us so it’s hardly an amount that’s going to make teams really carefully consider whether to appeal or not.peaty wrote: ↑12 Jun 2021, 13:25Paying to make an official protest? protesting in accordance with the code? Does that even exist? Is it not done through the media?
P.S:Jokes aside...Altough it looks like things have change a bit lately (at least for "some"), in theory...yes (article 17? of the sporting code). Protest 2000 euros and appeals 6000 euros.