I think they know now (of course too late as always) but it's too late for drastic changes to such a crucial Part of Aerodynamics. The Teams would protest the Hell out of it.scuderiafan wrote:How is it that the FiA looked at the rules and didn't say "well damn, these look a bit phallic"?
#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
that nose would have been the idea, or similar. But with the rules the way they are written and the philosophy now used (higher the nose the better) this is why we are seeing these bs noses.BrunoQuiocca wrote:And how about the 2006 McLaren MP4-21 nose?
neilbah wrote:Im assuming in this photo there are parts not fitted such as an airbox so indeed it looks as though air is taken in somewhere on the right sidepod, perhapse on the underside of the sidepod near the rear in the coke bottle section as it tapers in above the floor?
Lycoming wrote:Sounds to me like, instead of doing that, they should just all go compete at le mans. I mean, they look cool, they're wider track, recently mandated higher driver seating position for better vision, they can see the front of their car, they probably leave a bit less wake turbulence with covered wheels and high aspect ratio wings, engine regs are relatively free, etc. I mean, the current LMP1 regulations are pretty much exactly what you just described. Hell, BMW, Toyota, Audi all compete there too!.
So, why not just watch WEC/USCR? The grandstand tickets are hella cheap compared to an F1 race.
I already suggested this in the Force India thread. Scarbs thinks there will be more of an advantage in taking in the air from underneath the nose and directing it up over the nose.shelly wrote:This picture from omnicorse
http://www.omnicorse.it/img/articoli/ev ... tere__.jpg
suggests that there could be a possible solution for the transition from the nose to the chassis that makes the lower surface of the nose act like a diffuser On the radius connecting chassis and nose a strong suction peak could develop, with a good interaction with front turning vanes in a way similar to what we saw in 2013 on all cars (also with pelican noses).
The diffuser could be integrated by a s-duct to drive it.
The corresponding nose design woud be a low version of current noses, with wide pillars. The section between the pillars would behave like a venturi with skirts, interacting with the central fw section and the front turning vanes under the chassis 8which would act liek fences of a diffuser
Like this?Holm86 wrote:I already suggested this in the Force India thread. Scarbs thinks there will be more of an advantage in taking in the air from underneath the nose and directing it up over the nose.shelly wrote:This picture from omnicorse
http://www.omnicorse.it/img/articoli/ev ... tere__.jpg
suggests that there could be a possible solution for the transition from the nose to the chassis that makes the lower surface of the nose act like a diffuser On the radius connecting chassis and nose a strong suction peak could develop, with a good interaction with front turning vanes in a way similar to what we saw in 2013 on all cars (also with pelican noses).
The diffuser could be integrated by a s-duct to drive it.
The corresponding nose design woud be a low version of current noses, with wide pillars. The section between the pillars would behave like a venturi with skirts, interacting with the central fw section and the front turning vanes under the chassis 8which would act liek fences of a diffuser
The teams invented DRS and it is the teams who refuse to lose downforce. Just sayin.Manoah2u wrote: i'm convinced the aerodynamic aspect of f1 today is far too important, and it's gotten to a point where it seriously hurts
the sport. it's no longer real a 'battle' on the track the way it should. Apart from the rediculous punishments because of rediculous rules - the simple truth is overtakes and moves that worked in the older days don't work because of the design of the cars [the driver can't judge their car perfectly and can't judge distance perfectly because of the restricted view].
simple as that. that's why the overtakes compared to the 'older days' are so rare and have the need for these artificial 'gimmicks'.
the heart and soul is engineered out aerodynamically by flawed rulemaking and inconsequent desicions of the governing bodies.