Methane… Maybe they force the drivers to eat a lot of bean.
Cool shot, these are quite rare.Morteza wrote: ↑30 Oct 2019, 16:50Ferrari Energy Stores 2019 and 2018. Different shapes (via Nicolas Carpentiers)
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EIITWtzWwAA ... me=900x900
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EIITWt1XYAE ... me=900x900
Could just mean water, glycol and corrosion inhibitor. Probably doesn't but ...
It’s all semantics. It’s legal until it isnt. When teams do something that isnt intended by the rules (e.g. oil burning), it will be clarified and then subsequently changed. Same applies to Ferrari. Whatever they are doing is brilliant for sure, but most likely within some grey zone within the rules.Nonserviam85 wrote: ↑30 Oct 2019, 14:24It is obvious that the other teams are in the dark, but what stillmakes you think they are doing something illegal? The PU is deemed legal by the FIA so I believe the other PU manufacturers are just using FIA to extract as many info as they can.Phil wrote: ↑29 Oct 2019, 16:58It means (IMO) the teams are still in the dark and haven’t clarified the right area yet. Either that, or they haven’t filed the right protest.
You either copy them, assuming you know what they are doing, and run the risk to later be protested by the teams that don’t follow - or you make a specific inquiry into the legality of what you intend to do. If the FIA say no, it’s not allowed, you protest the team in question (like Racingpoint did with Renault).
Exactly, FRIC is a perfect example of this. It was known about for like a year and a half and was perfectly fine until it was banned mid season 2014.Phil wrote: ↑30 Oct 2019, 21:48It’s all semantics. It’s legal until it isnt. When teams do something that isnt intended by the rules (e.g. oil burning), it will be clarified and then subsequently changed. Same applies to Ferrari. Whatever they are doing is brilliant for sure, but most likely within some grey zone within the rules.
No, that would be illegal.
They are using a new nano fluid coolant developed in Australia, a graphene enhanced heat transfer coolant, FlexeGraph and Mark Priestley is a Investor.izzy wrote: ↑28 Oct 2019, 23:16yes me too! How can 3 'distinctly different fluids' all be equally good for cooling? Cooling is what, transporting heat, ie a high specific heat and low viscosity isn't it. i.e. water and glycol!! You would only use something else if you wanted it to do something else.
Oh now I look Ammonia is better. But still, whatever's best for cooling why use something else for cooling?
oh excellent! this is the kind of coolant we need in F1
According to Horner, Honda believes Ferrari's advantage is not on specific area but on both sides of the system. Combustion and ERS. They claim they have scope for improvement as well. So we know at least Merc and Honda (from team principal comments) are confident on making a step next year. 2020 testing and Melbourne will be interesting next year.
Fia said not! no incidental leakage and no fluctuations in pressure in any idraulic system during a race weekend. So no!wuzak wrote: ↑31 Oct 2019, 02:10For the intercooler I would expect that the area where "incidental leakage" could reasonably be found is at the fittings where the cooling circuit (oil) connects to the intercooler. Any leakage from those joints would not (should not) find its way anywhere near the air stream.
Yes.