RH1300S wrote:
Although I am guilty of hanging Ferrari myself........Reca's posts are very illuminating.
Thanks
. Anyway it isn’t difficult to see the difference between attacking Ferrari by principle simply ignoring any fact not suiting that agenda and to just express doubts about some things in order to understand each case more comprehensively, it’s the former that is quite irritating and I don’t remember you being guilty of that.
RH1300S wrote:
I suppose when you look at the wheel construction argument, perhaps you take the view that these things are not part of the wheel, but merely attached to it (like a tyre ) Do the regs state that you cannot attach components to the wheel?
No. In fact it’s the same case as for the crankshaft, it has to be made from an iron alloy still teams can attach to it high density counterweights because they aren’t crankshaft, just parts attached to it. If that wasn’t the meaning of the rule even the little ballast elements you can see attached to the wheels and often covered with tape would be illegal, actually even the brand stickers would be illegal.
RH1300S wrote:
Doesn't change the fact that these covers must reduce drag (or why else would cars that run at high speed fit covers at every opportunity - Le Mans, Indy etc.)
It’s a few years since I read the paper I referred to in the previous post but I recall that the advantage (hence the difference between rear wheel and cylinder of same dimension) was rapidly getting smaller way more than linearly with the increment of the aspect ratio (big difference with thin bike tyres, almost nothing with F1 tyres). That doesn’t mean that there’s no advantage, just that it’s so small to be negligible because the drag generation mechanism with big aspect ratio tyres is dominated by the counter-rotating vortices generated in the wake, way more than by the vortices generated inside the rim, so the drag changes very little with face open or closed.
In oval racing to close the rim is probably still worth a measurable gain given speed is all the time at 380-390 km/h if not more and longitudinal acceleration is very small, in F1 where speed is often under 300 km/h and for most of straight lines the car is accelerating at conspicuous rate, the advantage is vastly reduced.
The case of the Le Mans car is different because we are talking about closed wheel car so vortices inside the rim are more relevant on the wheel drag generation mechanism.
ginsu wrote:
Thanks for the pics and confirmation Reca...it does look like Ferrari have a good reason to be running the shields...although, i'm still pretty certain that it helps the aero. Ferrari have certainly found one of the most exploitable areas on the car...I just wish other teams would follow suit. Their front 'brake duct wings' are just killer and I'm sure they produce alot of downforce...I don't know why other teams aren't running them.
You’re welcome, although I wouldn’t take that as an absolute confirmation, I’ve still a margin of doubt, I would like to see a good pic of the rear end without wheels, particularly to understand if the total cooling flow exhausts back on the inside of the wheel or just a part.
Anyway I checked pics of other cars and as far as I can tell (not all the pics are very clear) only Ferrari and McLaren have outlets on the inside of the wheel, Ferrari above the wheel axle and McLaren, small, under it, so I would exclude the possibility other teams use the concept.
As for the winglets on brake ducts, not few teams use them, although the Ferrari ones are definitively the most visible and developed. I wouldn’t even guess how much effect they really have, that area is a too big mess to conclude anything without a good experience working on them and it’s very likely that an effective development isn’t really possible in scaled down model but needs to work with 100% scale. Not all teams have that possibility.
What I find puzzling is that many people scream “murder” seeing the fairings on the rear wheels but you hear very few complains about these winglets, I guess it must be because they aren’t as visible. Personally I find them way more questionable, although obviously they are absolutely legal for the very same reason the fairings are.
manchild wrote:
Check the news and you'll see that Ferrari didn't even bring their mass damper to German GP although FIA made first anti-mass damper reaction after Thursday scrutineering.
Charlie Whiting sent a fax with the decision to ban the mass damper to all the teams technical director (and to Jo Bauer) the day after the French Gp (17 July if I’m not mistaken). No team amongst the ones using it had the mass damper to German Gp, only Renault on the third car. All the teams knew it was banned, Renault apparently decided to ignore Charlie Whiting decision.