Ah the good old "scratch and sniff" trick! Designed to break off at the slightest of impacts, creating a large hole for undercar aero.WilliamsF1 wrote:I would have added a hole in the nose and ducted it to splitter area
http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/wp-content/u ... 014-32.jpg
Here's an explanation:turbof1 wrote:So they ran the nose again in free practice. It's still possible they are effectively running a dimensions-wise illegal nose, but I'm starting to doubt that path now since we are effectively talking about using preparation time for qualifying and race.
I still have issues to understand how it is legal.
I'm afraid it's hard for me to give you a proper translationDie Nase ist nach Artikel 3.7.8. auch legal. Darin wird verlangt, dass sich der Querschnitt der Frontpartie homogen vergrößert. Um sicherzustellen, dass die Frontpartien auch optisch eine gute Figur machen. Doch wie ist das zu schaffen mit zwei Löchern in der Struktur? "Wir subtrahieren die Fläche der Löcher einfach von der Gesamtfläche und stellen sicher, dass die daraus resultierende Fläche gemäß der Regeln homogen größer wird", verrät Green.
Indeed, very clever. I've very quickly sketched it (thanks to original idea from @ShumyAgain) and it is perfectly legal. Below, you can see video showing longitudinal vertical cross section taken parallel to the car centre line and it is always single open section just as article 3.7.8 demand.scarbs wrote:The nose is race legal, the angle of the nostril ducts are such any cross section of the nose will always present a single open section, very clever, I spent ages eyeballing in the pits just now.
Yeah thx scarbs for that as i was imaging (somesort). So they circumvent rules quite easily. The rule prescribe only 1st two open crossections (see below H and I) but not rest of it (A-G). Rules just provide linear relation how each next (mm^2) crossection from tip toward the front wheel axis increase its ABSOLUTE size.scarbs wrote:The nose is race legal, the angle of the nostril ducts are such any cross section of the nose will always present a single open section, very clever, I spent ages eyeballing in the pits just now.
turbof1 wrote:Alright, now I do understand it (a big thanks techF1LES for that video). The question that does remain now: is this solution actually better then the conventional one? Or even: what does it do? I can imagine that being a completely different flow pattern then what normally goes around there.