Ferrari SF23

A place to discuss the characteristics of the cars in Formula One, both current as well as historical. Laptimes, driver worshipping and team chatter do not belong here.
FDD
FDD
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Joined: 29 Mar 2019, 01:08

Re: Ferrari SF23

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Andi76 wrote:
22 Feb 2023, 08:44
Stu wrote:
21 Feb 2023, 18:13
OT, but I wonder which team sought clarification?

Back on topic…
Kyle seemed to think that the duct entrance, exit (and probably whole duct) are in the “mid-chassis legality box” in his assessment of the car, thus avoiding minimum radius rules that apply to “bodywork”.
If it is ‘just’ an s-duct variation, the entrance is much larger than the outlet; would this re-energise any turbulent flow ingested?
According to media reports there were "several teams" who sought clarification.
gordonthegun wrote:
21 Feb 2023, 22:44
f1316 wrote:
21 Feb 2023, 22:23


It’s tough to tell since the angle of these pictures isn’t the same. I do think the angle of the pushrod is slightly sharper (ie a smaller angle) though and the lower suspension arms are lower than last year (presumably to give them more setup flexibility?).
The fact that "the lower suspension arms are lower" implies a thicker chassis in that area but it seems to continue to be thicker going to the nose as well.
https://postimages.org/

"Enrico Cardile, the technical manager of the project, explained that “… the most evident changes of the new suspension are certainly in the front area, where we have gone from a configuration with a high track road to a low track road, guided by the needs of aerodynamics”. The Italian engineer also underlined that “the front wing is different as well as the structure of the nose”.

The approach of the front has been changed more than it seems: the two triangles with carbon covers that have been specially designed to laminate the flows according to the wishes of Diego Tondi’s staff, the Ferrari aerodynamics chief. Not only that, but the suspension arms have been lowered so that the chassis is also in line with the nose which is more hollowed out on the sides in the lower part.

Even in the yellow dotted line, the chassis rises towards the Venturi channel and the vertical intake of the bypass duct is not overlooked, a sign that the introduction of this concept has been evaluated with great attention in the definition of the entire front part of the SF-23.

The photo from Motorsport Italy allows us to see that the keel of the SF-23 reaches the leading edge of the tea-tray, and there is no longer the double splitter that Ferrari had immediately copied to the Aston Martin AMR22 already for the presentation of the F1-75." - quote from Scuderiafans
Do You think that kneel now generate the vortex instead of the splitter before?

Andi76
Andi76
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Joined: 03 Feb 2021, 20:19

Re: Ferrari SF23

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FDD wrote:
22 Feb 2023, 10:46
Andi76 wrote:
22 Feb 2023, 08:44
Stu wrote:
21 Feb 2023, 18:13


OT, but I wonder which team sought clarification?

Back on topic…
Kyle seemed to think that the duct entrance, exit (and probably whole duct) are in the “mid-chassis legality box” in his assessment of the car, thus avoiding minimum radius rules that apply to “bodywork”.
If it is ‘just’ an s-duct variation, the entrance is much larger than the outlet; would this re-energise any turbulent flow ingested?
According to media reports there were "several teams" who sought clarification.
gordonthegun wrote:
21 Feb 2023, 22:44


The fact that "the lower suspension arms are lower" implies a thicker chassis in that area but it seems to continue to be thicker going to the nose as well.
https://postimages.org/

"Enrico Cardile, the technical manager of the project, explained that “… the most evident changes of the new suspension are certainly in the front area, where we have gone from a configuration with a high track road to a low track road, guided by the needs of aerodynamics”. The Italian engineer also underlined that “the front wing is different as well as the structure of the nose”.

The approach of the front has been changed more than it seems: the two triangles with carbon covers that have been specially designed to laminate the flows according to the wishes of Diego Tondi’s staff, the Ferrari aerodynamics chief. Not only that, but the suspension arms have been lowered so that the chassis is also in line with the nose which is more hollowed out on the sides in the lower part.

Even in the yellow dotted line, the chassis rises towards the Venturi channel and the vertical intake of the bypass duct is not overlooked, a sign that the introduction of this concept has been evaluated with great attention in the definition of the entire front part of the SF-23.

The photo from Motorsport Italy allows us to see that the keel of the SF-23 reaches the leading edge of the tea-tray, and there is no longer the double splitter that Ferrari had immediately copied to the Aston Martin AMR22 already for the presentation of the F1-75." - quote from Scuderiafans
Do You think that kneel now generate the vortex instead of the splitter before?
Hard to say because this area has not really been seen properly. But I think rather that here the mentioned major changes of the strakes will be decisive and they are also the reason for the changes to the splitter. Just like the underbody itself of course.

Andi76
Andi76
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Joined: 03 Feb 2021, 20:19

Re: Ferrari SF23

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gordonthegun wrote:
21 Feb 2023, 22:44
f1316 wrote:
21 Feb 2023, 22:23
gordonthegun wrote:
21 Feb 2023, 22:14
Here the differences of the geometry of the front suspension and of the engine cover.
The front of the chassis, starting from front suspension area, appears to be taller than last year.

https://i.ibb.co/TKs22J7/f1-2023-ferrar ... 1-copy.jpg
It’s tough to tell since the angle of these pictures isn’t the same. I do think the angle of the pushrod is slightly sharper (ie a smaller angle) though and the lower suspension arms are lower than last year (presumably to give them more setup flexibility?).
The fact that "the lower suspension arms are lower" implies a thicker chassis in that area but it seems to continue to be thicker going to the nose as well.
In this picture, it looks like the inlet for the venturi ducts has changed quite a bit. It looks wider.

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organic
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Joined: 08 Jan 2022, 02:24
Location: Cambridge, UK

Re: Ferrari SF23

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Andi76 wrote:
22 Feb 2023, 14:50
gordonthegun wrote:
21 Feb 2023, 22:44
f1316 wrote:
21 Feb 2023, 22:23


It’s tough to tell since the angle of these pictures isn’t the same. I do think the angle of the pushrod is slightly sharper (ie a smaller angle) though and the lower suspension arms are lower than last year (presumably to give them more setup flexibility?).
The fact that "the lower suspension arms are lower" implies a thicker chassis in that area but it seems to continue to be thicker going to the nose as well.
In this picture, it looks like the inlet for the venturi ducts has changed quite a bit. It looks wider.
Look at left rear tyre. The angle is significantly different. As is the undercut much larger, distorting things further. Every team was at the maximum legality for the tunnel entrances last year already as far as we could tell

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Re: Ferrari SF23

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Venturiation
Venturiation
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Re: Ferrari SF23

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AR3-GP
AR3-GP
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Re: Ferrari SF23

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Image

Xyz22
Xyz22
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Joined: 16 Feb 2022, 20:05

Re: Ferrari SF23

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How can Scarbs know this?

MTL79
MTL79
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Joined: 08 Jan 2014, 17:48

Re: Ferrari SF23

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Venturiation wrote:
22 Feb 2023, 17:54
The way that s-duct has been drawn looks very angular. It almost seems like it would cause some additional drag with air beging forced into it, hitting angular walls and then proceeding outward?

bagajohny
bagajohny
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Joined: 01 Jul 2021, 08:58

Re: Ferrari SF23

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That was very quick. I was expecting at least a couple of races before any other team adopts it.

PhillipM
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Location: Over the road from Boothy...

Re: Ferrari SF23

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Xyz22 wrote:
22 Feb 2023, 18:06
How can Scarbs know this?
Merc looked like they already had one last year for a start just much smaller and in the sidepod entrance itself. Wouldn't be hard for them to take it as far as the Ferrari solution

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Re: Ferrari SF23

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bagajohny wrote:
22 Feb 2023, 19:50
That was very quick. I was expecting at least a couple of races before any other team adopts it.
He said they didn't copy it but rather multiple teams had thought about trying it in 2022. I imagine they didn't because it would add weight that in '22 nobody could afford

AR3-GP
AR3-GP
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Joined: 06 Jul 2021, 01:22

Re: Ferrari SF23

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PhillipM wrote:
22 Feb 2023, 19:57
Xyz22 wrote:
22 Feb 2023, 18:06
How can Scarbs know this?
Merc looked like they already had one last year for a start just much smaller and in the sidepod entrance itself. Wouldn't be hard for them to take it as far as the Ferrari solution
This is a subtle point, but if you just look at the Mercedes radiator inlet, you can see why an "s-duct" is redundant for their car. The low radiator inlet (as opposed to the high inlets on everyone else) already ingest the turbulent boundary layer before the air travels around the sidepod. Less obvious on the W13, but blatantly obvious on the W14. The W14 rad inlet just looks like a much wider and taller Ferrari s-duct, if that makes sense.

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gordonthegun
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Re: Ferrari SF23

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Image

LostInTranslation
LostInTranslation
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Joined: 06 Jun 2017, 22:15

Re: Ferrari SF23

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Maybe it doesn't appear at first glance, but the SF23 seems to be quite slimmed down and cramped in many of its aspects.
Last edited by LostInTranslation on 22 Feb 2023, 20:45, edited 1 time in total.