In addition, try finding a driver that can cope with the forces involved in getting a vehicle around a circuit that quickTim.Wright wrote:The wiper is the least of their worries. I did a few calcs in another discussion about this today...
Try finding tyres which will support a 1000+kg car giving around 1000+kg of downforce while cornering at 3G and topping out at 300+km/h while being road homologated, treaded and somewhat durable and somewhat cost effective.
In my opinion it's not possible within the constraints of a production car programme. You basically need a tyre as grippy as an F1 tyre but as strong as a truck tyre.
The fact that it has been cited as a 2 seater luxury car means it will never hit any decent weight target so the tyre requirements are going to be simply mental.
Consider the end consumer.Blaze1 wrote:There was thread about production cars having F1 levels of downforce earlier. It is entirely possible to create a production car that is road legal and creates more downforce than a Formula One car in my opinion. One of the major problems would be developing a tyre that could convert that downforce into grip in a meaningful fashion.
The grip to load ratio of a tyre isn't linear, so the more load the more difficult it become to extract performance past a certain point.SR71 wrote:Consider the end consumer.Blaze1 wrote:There was thread about production cars having F1 levels of downforce earlier. It is entirely possible to create a production car that is road legal and creates more downforce than a Formula One car in my opinion. One of the major problems would be developing a tyre that could convert that downforce into grip in a meaningful fashion.
They have no problem having these cars shipped around the world with a team of engineers to run them.
If they need to put special tires on this to make it lap that fast - that's no issue, the car will be plenty quick on road legal tires. Those tires will STILL be specially developed for this specific car.
I dont see any problems with regards to the tires.
SR71
Oh I realize the special case we're talking about but I'm assuming this car is well into development and the claims being made are headline grabbing but most likely based in some sort of reality.Blaze1 wrote:The grip to load ratio of a tyre isn't linear, so the more load the more difficult it become to extract performance past a certain point.SR71 wrote:Consider the end consumer.Blaze1 wrote:There was thread about production cars having F1 levels of downforce earlier. It is entirely possible to create a production car that is road legal and creates more downforce than a Formula One car in my opinion. One of the major problems would be developing a tyre that could convert that downforce into grip in a meaningful fashion.
They have no problem having these cars shipped around the world with a team of engineers to run them.
If they need to put special tires on this to make it lap that fast - that's no issue, the car will be plenty quick on road legal tires. Those tires will STILL be specially developed for this specific car.
I dont see any problems with regards to the tires.
SR71
Agreed. Weight kills everything. It is not rare to see cars able to generate more downforce than a Formula One car, but even so none comes close to F1 laptimes simply because of weight.wesley123 wrote:imo LMPs are a pretty good example of how difficult it is. LMPs have more downforce, more power (and possibly more grip) yet, due to (mainly) the weight they are slower than F1 cars. And LMPs are solely used for racing.
Now Aston Martin wants to build a usable, road-legal car that is quicker than an F1 car, and i really don't think it is currently(or ever at all) possible to do so. The main points here are the "usable" and "road-legal" parts. I don't think fancy stuff like fans fit in the category usable.
There is never anything wrong with aiming high, but to me this sounds a bit over-the-top.
I agree with you.DiogoBrand wrote:Fans hill help creating more downforce which is basically vertical pressure on the contact patches. You still need rubber able to cope with that pressure in order to convert that downforce into cornering speed.
IMO the secret will be in tyre width, since there's a limit of pressure the rubber can withstand, you can lower that pressure by increasing the area on which the force is distributed.
As for technologies banned in F1 that will be used on the car, my guess is active suspension rather than fans. For some reason I don't think "blowing stuff from the road on whoever comes behind you" as a very marketable concept.
You blow the air behind you when you have a race car because you can, doesn't mean it's the only place to blow air.DiogoBrand wrote:Fans hill help creating more downforce which is basically vertical pressure on the contact patches. You still need rubber able to cope with that pressure in order to convert that downforce into cornering speed.
IMO the secret will be in tyre width, since there's a limit of pressure the rubber can withstand, you can lower that pressure by increasing the area on which the force is distributed.
As for technologies banned in F1 that will be used on the car, my guess is active suspension rather than fans. For some reason I don't think "blowing stuff from the road on whoever comes behind you" as a very marketable concept.