Mercedes cut an upsided down "T" shape in their chassis to accomodate the intake pipe and intercooler.OO7 wrote: ↑08 Nov 2020, 16:34I could be wrong, but I'm not so sure that having the turbine closer to the engine is the reason. Mercedes place their intercooler in front of the engine and pipework from the intake to the compressor and from the compressor to the plenum, are all ahead of the engine, essentially pushing it backwards. The Ferrari has/had it's intercooler and associated pipework above the engine. This increases the c.g, but creates a shorter engine package. The turbo is substantially place in the free space of the the gearbox casing/slightly above it.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑07 Nov 2020, 21:59Having that turbine closer to the engine has really given them a tight coke bottle area.
Expect Ferrari and Renault to follow suit.
That's not an Atrax, it's a LatrodectusF1Krof wrote: ↑08 Nov 2020, 20:45Jeeezzz look at this crazy atrax robustus... Isn't this the most comprehensive Formula 1 car ever made (so far)?
https://www.australiangeographic.com.au ... spider.jpg
Yes indeed. I'm surprised how the air appears to lift upwards in the coke bottle - I guess that's from air coming in laterally across the top of the floor. Or perhaps there's a "bubble" of slower air in front of the diffuser step / rear suspension that causes the air to flow upward in that zone. Slower air would be, relative to the air below the floor, high pressure meaning some downforce.Blackout wrote: ↑16 Nov 2020, 09:31These conditions provide great natural flowviz pics
https://motorsport.nextgen-auto.com/pho ... ce/563.jpg
Just realised they put Lewis' logo on his tyres!Blackout wrote: ↑16 Nov 2020, 09:31These conditions provide great natural flowviz pics
https://motorsport.nextgen-auto.com/pho ... ce/563.jpg
For sure.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Nov 2020, 10:55Also, that rear tyre - if your road car wore its tyres like that, you'd think you had overinflated them by quite a bit. All that big tyre and they only wore the central belt amounting to half of the available tread.Blackout wrote: ↑16 Nov 2020, 09:31These conditions provide great natural flowviz pics
https://motorsport.nextgen-auto.com/pho ... ce/563.jpg
All circuits will tend to wear one side more than the other as they have more left or right corners - Turkey has more left handers than right handers I think. T8, being a long left hander, will especially wear the right hand tyres more than the left.humble sabot wrote: ↑18 Nov 2020, 09:32Biggest surprise here is the difference in wear between left and right. Particularly in the front.
I remember being at Silverstone once, F3 were on the race-card and one of the competitors had a bit of a tangle early on and his air box (and therefore restrictor) was knocked off. He continued to the end, but was disqualified.balalev wrote: ↑15 Nov 2020, 18:26flexible T-wing
update: its just broken. wasnt moving at the beginning of the race.
https://preview.redd.it/ixm3posbjfz51.j ... c20740df97
Removing an air restrictor is always going to be beneficial. Broken bodywork is almost always going to be detrimental.Stu wrote: ↑18 Nov 2020, 21:47I remember being at Silverstone once, F3 were on the race-card and one of the competitors had a bit of a tangle early on and his air box (and therefore restrictor) was knocked off. He continued to the end, but was disqualified.balalev wrote: ↑15 Nov 2020, 18:26flexible T-wing
update: its just broken. wasnt moving at the beginning of the race.
https://preview.redd.it/ixm3posbjfz51.j ... c20740df97
He started the race with a legal car, but didn’t finish with one!
F1 seems to operate to different rules, certainly as far as bodywork is concerned!