Yes and Porsche also used it in their hybrid 911 racer a couple years back.Huntresa wrote:Audi uses their Flywheel.
Yes and Porsche also used it in their hybrid 911 racer a couple years back.Huntresa wrote:Audi uses their Flywheel.
They could make the turbo sit on top of the low gearbox, however not sure if turbo and TERS (which are on a common shaft) can fit in there.bill shoe wrote:I think 2014 gearbox will be skinny as possible and a bit high/tall. Lack of beam wing changes all incentives in that area. I think rear suspension driveshaft, lower wishbone, and pullrod will be entirely at or higher than the rear wheel centerline.Sevach wrote:The primary benefit of the low gearbox was a better airflow to the beam wing (which has been banned)
Also the regulations now dictate that the exhaust must be placed in the area above the gearbox, no wiggle room on that,.
I think those regulations will "kill" the low gearbox.
Maybe if they go even lower it will help the diffuser... but that's a stretch.
I agree, we might even see pushrod rear.bill shoe wrote: I think 2014 gearbox will be skinny as possible and a bit high/tall. Lack of beam wing changes all incentives in that area. I think rear suspension driveshaft, lower wishbone, and pullrod will be entirely at or higher than the rear wheel centerline.
I doubt that. Newey invented it 2009 for the small diffusers, now diffusers are even smaller... so why change it? Diffuser roof is even more important, I think pull rod is best to feed that.Sevach wrote:I agree, we might even see pushrod rear.bill shoe wrote: I think 2014 gearbox will be skinny as possible and a bit high/tall. Lack of beam wing changes all incentives in that area. I think rear suspension driveshaft, lower wishbone, and pullrod will be entirely at or higher than the rear wheel centerline.
Invented?FrukostScones wrote:I doubt that. Newey invented it 2009 for the small diffusers...
wrong? in multiple ways. No.turbof1 wrote:That statement is wrong in multiple ways. For one he didn't invented it, and for two the diffusers haven't become smaller since 2009. Newey designed it in the first place for a single deck diffuser, and even kept it in 2010 when they built a fully integrated multi deck diffuser.
For the rest it does seem unlikely that anybody will make a switch back to rear push rod.
DD's weren't technically diffusers in the strict sence. They were manipulated bodywork above the actual diffuser. It's down on how you interpret it, but technically there wasn't a further restriction on diffuser size in 2011, just a clamp down on loopholes that allowed holes in the underbody:to produce (as something useful) for the first time through the use of the imagination or of ingenious thinking and experimen
ah, ok, I thought that the diffuser size stays the same before I saw the F1technical picture, you say it is a reference to the smaller rake? how can that be with that rear wing... will it be have bigger max height? I don#t think so. What is wrong with the image?turbof1 wrote:I think this will come more down to interpretation and saying the same in different words.
'Invented' wasn't good choice of words. He implemented it, but he never conceived the idea of pull rod suspension. That goes way back. You were much better off with using "implemented" from the beginning, as invented means something else:
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/inventDD's weren't technically diffusers in the strict sence. They were manipulated bodywork above the actual diffuser. It's down on how you interpret it, but technically there wasn't a further restriction on diffuser size in 2011, just a clamp down on loopholes that allowed holes in the underbody:to produce (as something useful) for the first time through the use of the imagination or of ingenious thinking and experimen
http://www.formula1.com/news/technical/2011/0/815.html
Although it did in practical sence made the diffuser larger, the rules didn't put any restriction on size in 2011.
In 2014 diffuser size will remain EXACTLY the same. There is no further restriction. Rather, the diffuser will work less efficiently due the loss of the beam wing. The drawing on which you are probably basing yourself on, isn't a smaller diffuser; it is a reference to the reduced rake, a consequence of no exhaust blowing.
We went through almost exactly this conversation in the Force India thread, so you can skip to the end. Diffuser height is the same but the gurney flap on top of it is no more.turbof1 wrote:If you aren't convinced, I can pull up the official rules from both 2013 and 2014.