Not using the real suspension wishbones which a team believes will provide an aerodynamic advantage on the launch car (where real photos will give a much clearer picture) is the same logic as not presenting the wings they will use in Melbourne.Blackout wrote:I wonder what Allison means with ''front suspension layouts are substantially revised to try and give us better aerodynamic opportunities'' ? Pull rods a la Ferrari ? or just a different angling ? Fact is; the wishbones we see on the CGI render* are different from the 'so called 'E21''. forder arms are larger and the independant sttering rack disappeared and the thickness of the upper wishbone suggests it now hosts the steering arm...
*a poor render obviously, but...
http://i16.servimg.com/u/f16/14/79/55/26/_i4v9510.jpg
Edit: didnt see the two precedent posts
If Lotus wanted to confuse with smoke and mirrors then they've succeeded. There are different pics of differently configured cars, a lot of which look suspiciously like the old car. They can't even be consistent on the airbox with the press pack images different from the physical car.Tomba wrote:The team itself released a collection of computer generated images, with different exhausts and an un-stepped nose. I wouldn't read into it too much.
Image gallery of the real launched car:
http://www.f1technical.net/gallery/2013 ... e21-launch
I'd like to categorically state that I have no idea what I'm talking aboutamouzouris wrote:Beelsebob, Gridlock, myself have actually had multiple upvotes which maybe indicates that they know what they are talking about...
If I remember correctly, he said that the renders show a better picture of how the car will be when testing starts.turbof1 wrote:Scarbs told the studio pictures give a much better impression of how the E21 really will be. So at the launch they indeed used a E20, but the rendered studio photo's are suggested to be the real deal.
Yes, that's correct. The reasons are still the same: true gold color looks bad on TVstefan_ wrote:The old JPS livery wasn't always gold, as a matter of fact it was mostly black-beige/cream as the one we see these days.
Most likely since Honeywell is redBlackout wrote:Because of an upcoming sponsor ? (Honeywell ?)
stefan_ wrote:
via @wtf1couk