AbbaleRacing77 wrote:Yes but car manufactures dont see the addition of cupholders as a disadvantage to there center of gravity either... Your comparing apples and oranges. In the past Ive noticed major handling differences with a 2mm change in rake on some of my cars. Point being is that you dont run an absurd amount of rake like that unless you have a huge handling deficiency in the car OR somehow using it to your advantage to create large amounts of downforce.
Im gonna make an educated guess and say that theyre using it to create huge amounts of downforce. With that said... the amount of downforce that theyre making with this little trick that they've developed by creating a virtual skirt with the exhaust, and in a sense doubling the size of there diffuser must be HUGE in order to out weigh all the disadvantages of running that much rake in the car.
If you think about it not only is the high rake making the diffuser bigger height wise but it might also be lengthening it by allowing air to start expanding much earlier (at the middle of the car).
Normally a car with this much rake would be at a huge disadvantage because its either inherently very imbalanced or they just have a terribly snappy over steery setup, not to mention worsened center of gravity. I used to race a formula enterprise car when i was 16 and it was the only car that i ever ran tons of rake on because it lacked front downforce combined with crappy spec shocks and had understeer like theres no tomorrow. I think its fair to say that red bull doesnt lack front downforce and doesnt have crappy shocks. Due to the "virtual blown skirts" on the red bull they are able to simulate something very aerodynamically advanced that cleverly allows them to bypass the FIA set diffuser dimensions creating a virtual super floor/diffusor.
You see, the RB7 was designed with the rake built in, so they make the geometry of the suspension to negate the ill effects you speak of. Looking on the photos of the RB7 the suspension is set very low to the floor, even some parts below the floor. The kinematics of the car is as if there was no extreme rake at all.
Now as per the aerodynamics, again, I did not want to discuss from the viewpoint of EDB, because that was done and dusted in the Exhaust blown diffuser thread, we already covered how the EBD works with ReBull's rake.
But because of the replies to my posts, what I am more focused on is, what is
going to happen to RedBull when Exhaust overrun is disabled. In other words - Mclaren, Ferrari and RedBull more or less aerodynamically equalised how will the extreme rake of the floor affect RedBull in all aspects. I want to hear what you guys think of what is
going to happen.