Weren't these front inboard brakes on Lotus 72 sort of “adjusted leftovers” from 4WD car rather than original concept?
http://www.formula1news.it/storia/storia70803.htm
Now that you’ve mentioned it… recently I read about Mika Salo’s medical exam where it was mentioned that huge amount of CF dust was found in his lungs. I wonder if it has something to with him being a backmarker most of his career (breathing the air polluted by many cars in front of him) or is it a common risk for all drivers?scarbs wrote:... not to mention dust would be an issue.
They would probably only find pollen & gold dust in MS's lungsmanchild wrote:Now that you’ve mentioned it… recently I read about Mika Salo’s medical exam where it was mentioned that huge amount of CF dust was found in his lungs. I wonder if it has something to with him being a backmarker most of his career (breathing the air polluted by many cars in front of him) or is it a common risk for all drivers?scarbs wrote:... not to mention dust would be an issue.
Since the quality of the air driver breaths depends also on position of air intake for cockpit cooling which one brings in less polluted air – nose intake or the one on top of the cockpit used by Ferrari and Renault?
I'd like to add to this relevant post. Back in the 60's when Ford spent a lot of money chasing LeMans, they did a lot of pioneering groundwork in analysis and information gathering. They discovered that when under full load, the driveshafts of the GT-40 flexed up to 270 degrees. Remember, a driveshaft can be treated as a torsion bar.riff_raff wrote:scarbs,
The drawback with inboard brake rotors is the torsional wind-up that occurs in the drive shafts. It makes the brakes feel mushy and unresponsive. Getting positive feedback through the braking system is very important to drivers. The fastest drivers are always the ones that brake latest and accelerate earliest thru a corner.