n smikle wrote:I guess the floor can be cut back to just over the regulated 650mm from the center line. And you have a legal 50mm left on each side. It is still legal if you cut the reference with a trans. or long. plane you will get a continuous line on the reference plane within the 650mm. I could be wrong though..
This is my second guess on the layout. I figure those metal forms on the edge of the floor are guides that turn the exhaust towards the middle of the diffuser, and at the same time allow a slit opening proximately 30mm wide under the floor, outside of 650mm from the center line.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v626 ... ccaex2.png
I was wondering about the same prospect in my initial analysis of the photos back on page 86.
Formula None wrote:That's what I'm wondering. They can have a hole in the floor at the outer 50mm AFAIK, but I'm not sure what effect this would have (blowing down and seemingly out). The metallic strip might just be part of the shaped exhaust piece getting exposed in that area.
The thick, stumpy spine shape on the topside still needs explaining, though, and it ain't no turning vane/vortex generator. Surely there is a clear cut answer, I mean we're talking about affecting the high pressure side, on one hand, and the low pressure side, on the other. Seems like one, and I don't know which, would have to be preferable. Say it were a blown wing. Would you aim the exhaust gases at the high pressure side, or the low pressure side? Apples to oranges, wings to floors?!
Maybe they are doing a little of both, as in the front exit of the Renault R31 (some exhaust goes above, some below, split by floor's leading edge). I brought up the idea a few weeks ago in the RB7 thread, of using bodywork positioned in front of two legal exhaust exits to split the flow for routing to different parts of the car. If such an interpretation of the rules is legal, then there could be two slits, above and below. It's a question of where the exhaust system ends and bodywork begins.