LionsHeart wrote: ↑04 Mar 2024, 15:01
mwillems wrote: ↑04 Mar 2024, 14:24
This is true. Regarding the mechanical aspect of our setup, Rob Marshall is no doubt helping refine the solution. David Sanchez will already be talking about his learnings from Ferrari, and the Ferrari does have a good front end from what I can see, so hopefully he can help us understand what we need to do with the Aerodynamics to have the aero functioning nicely at all speeds.
I suppose this year will be one that requires a good amount of patience.
Oh, had I read your post a couple of minutes earlier, then I wouldn't have had to write the previous post at the top.
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Totally agree.
Whilst the mechanical is always part of the solution when it comes to adding more grip, it can only go so far. Over the winter a big part of work that occurred on the car was mechanical, to create a more stable platform and to add more grip at the rear axle.
Despite this, we can see that the same problems remain and don't seem much better than where we left them last year. So it is possible that more work is required to dial in these cars, but I think it start to become more clear that there is also an aero issue. The reason I look at the front is because it is used for conditioning the air that is going to rearwards, whether it be directing air flow to the floor or how we deal with the tyre wake.
Last year in Singapore we improved the car by dealing better with tyre wake at low speeds, this included changes to the front pontoon to catch and deal with some of that airflow earlier. The sidepods are no longer doing this like last year but the car isn't worse in the slow corners, so the manner in which it deals with the airflow at slow speeds has got better, in that the pontoons can be shaped less with this issue in mind and more with the undercut.
It's also worth noting that apart from in low load / low downforce config, the car had very good traction from corners and from the standing start last year with the most notable trait of the car when it comes to balance being understeer. The V shaped profile of some corners also led me to believe that this was to avoid a corner profile that required consistent generation of downforce from the floor, because we couldn't generate downforce at low loads consistently, therefore the team used an approach using more mechanical grip.
So with everything that I have observed anecdotally over the past year I've tended to see this a need of stable aerodynamics that needs both a mechanical and aerodynamic solution. The mechanical platform has been created, but I'm not seeing much that has changed by way of Aero that will take advantage of it.
When the team talk about all the potential this new car will bring, this is what comes to mind for me, a new package on top of the car that will work better with this platform including new Sidepods and Floor to replace the "placeholder" that went on the launch car and a new front of the car designed to work in the window of the new platform.
I'm not suggesting it will look hugely different, just that it will be much more refined.
And maybe it will be less like a reliant robin!