After front, now rear wing:
That cutout was present on basically all launch cars in 2022. Some teams later filled it out and even later cut it out again, Mercedes and Alpine pop to my mind. The novel thing is a discontinuous joint between flap "endplate" and the actual endplate, which Ferrari used only on the Spa wing this year, for now.
I think what he said may be the ridge of rear wing endplate,like aston aplineVanja #66 wrote: ↑06 Oct 2023, 08:12That cutout was present on basically all launch cars in 2022. Some teams later filled it out and even later cut it out again, Mercedes and Alpine pop to my mind. The novel thing is a discontinuous joint between flap "endplate" and the actual endplate, which Ferrari used only on the Spa wing this year, for now.
https://cdn-2.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... ail-1.webp
Really nice angle. I'm still not buying into their explanation that they need to setup the car with extra understeer for it to be more stable, at least not as the only explanation of the chronic understeer. Those flaps (3rd and 4th) are heavily cambered to pull off such an abrupt increase in angle that we see here and the transition to outboard section shows just how much this sacrifices the planform surface and, consequently, the available downforce.gordonthegun wrote: ↑07 Oct 2023, 14:06Interesting views of FW:
https://cdn-8.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... ail-1.webp
Thank you for your analysis.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑11 Oct 2023, 14:09Really nice angle. I'm still not buying into their explanation that they need to setup the car with extra understeer for it to be more stable, at least not as the only explanation of the chronic understeer. Those flaps (3rd and 4th) are heavily cambered to pull off such an abrupt increase in angle that we see here and the transition to outboard section shows just how much this sacrifices the planform surface and, consequently, the available downforce.gordonthegun wrote: ↑07 Oct 2023, 14:06Interesting views of FW:
https://cdn-8.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... ail-1.webp
I think it's most likely their downstream flow is very sensitive to any major changes to inboard section flap angle and an increase in resulting chord length of the whole wing. It was strange to see no incidence angle on their front suspension arms and still is, no idea what's going on there but it may have something to do with said sensitivity.
In the first part of the season, I thought they rely on extra strong outwash on the front wing for downstream performance (floor and sidepod interaction obviously) so they need such an aggressive wing angle and so they are forced to sacrifice planform surface. However, after the major changes of endplates and that whole area in Austria, which have big consequences on outwash structures, it's fairly certain this isn't the only reason to keep such a wing design. Maybe it's not even any of the reasons at all.
the major difference is the BWorganic wrote: ↑19 Oct 2023, 20:37Looks like the same configuration as Japan. Some people are saying that the endplate corner has been modified and I did at first until I saw a comparable angle
Japan
https://i.imgur.com/OFBuDDM.jpeg
COTA
https://i.imgur.com/WWEGXy2.jpeg