I guess if there is floor bulk in that area, makes sense to fill it with something to free up space elsewhere.
I guess if there is floor bulk in that area, makes sense to fill it with something to free up space elsewhere.
I wonder if the side impact structure is hollow and if they could put oil vessel inside of it. Although you risk writing off the chassis if hidden tank develops a leak. So it is probably a sensible risk to take....
Interesting. The construction looks quite different to RB.vorticism wrote: ↑02 Apr 2023, 05:54AT running a longbow (continuous front arm) this season. You heard it here first.
https://cdn-3.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... eta-1.webp
motorsport.com
They also have the most pronounced swan neck RW support:
https://cdn-9.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... eta-1.webp
motorsport.com
Great evolution of the original J. Barnard metal flexures.
A twice fixed symmetrical cantilever could offer some roll resistance. Whether they're doing that here I can't say for sure; like you said it does look like most of the bending would occur outside of the chassis which is to say along the main span of the arm. Until we see them sans aero covers we're guessing at whether a waisted portion provided localized flexibility, or whether the entire arm bends uniformly.ing. wrote: ↑03 Apr 2023, 20:40Great evolution of the original J. Barnard metal flexures.
The thicker section portion at the center—with wide based anchoring pins—makes for a solid base with reasonable load reactions.
The flexing seems to be starting at the section change (just at the outer edge of the chassis) but not sure if limited to a small distance along the bow or if the flex is distributed all along the bow. Not sure what advantage the latter would offer?
To me, it would offer roll resistance but it's a secondary effect. It's not working truly like an anti-roll bar. It's a bit like saying that a traditional coil spring suspension offers roll resistance. Nominally, it does because it resists compression on the wheel corner, but a true "anti-roll bar" is one that works by transferring load to the opposite wheel. This double pinned cantilever can't transmit loads from left to right (it's not apparent right now that it can).vorticism wrote: ↑03 Apr 2023, 20:43A twice fixed symmetrical cantilever could offer some roll resistance. Whether they're doing that here I can't say for sure; like you said it does look like most of the bending would occur outside of the chassis which is to say along the main span of the arm. Until we see them sans aero covers we're guessing at whether a waisted portion provided localized flexibility, or whether the entire arm bends uniformly.ing. wrote: ↑03 Apr 2023, 20:40Great evolution of the original J. Barnard metal flexures.
The thicker section portion at the center—with wide based anchoring pins—makes for a solid base with reasonable load reactions.
The flexing seems to be starting at the section change (just at the outer edge of the chassis) but not sure if limited to a small distance along the bow or if the flex is distributed all along the bow. Not sure what advantage the latter would offer?
AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Apr 2023, 22:39To me, it would offer roll resistance but it's a secondary effect. It's not working truly like an anti-roll bar. It's a bit like saying that a traditional coil spring suspension offers roll resistance. Nominally, it does because it resists compression on the wheel corner, but a true "anti-roll bar" is one that works by transferring load to the opposite wheel. This double pinned cantilever can't transmit loads from left to right (it's not apparent right now that it can).
I also think that the deflection from one side of the bow is not transmitted to the opposite side as the two flanged fasteners look to be used to clamp down the center section as well as react fore/aft + lateral loads in the bores of the beam.vorticism wrote: ↑03 Apr 2023, 22:57A uniform leaf spring held by two pivots will transfer some displacement to the opposite side in the same direction. In this application it potentially could, that's what I interpret the inclusion of a recess as (in reality it may simply be reducing stresses on the assembly). It's more pronounced on the RB18 arrangement which has pillow mounts of some sort.