Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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.
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ing.
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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Farnborough wrote:
12 Feb 2024, 21:30
ing. wrote:
12 Feb 2024, 15:38
gordonthegun wrote:
12 Feb 2024, 12:51
It’s very obvious from the pic of the ‘24 AMR what could be one reason Ferrari avoided going the push-rod: due to the rules imposing all upper and lower wishbone joints above the wheel centreline, the push-rod is almost horizontal. I expect this will result in very small motion ratio at the inboard end from a vertical bump displacement so requiring a larger rocker ratio to get decent damper displacement and reduce loads on the pushrod itself and at the cost of some springing and damper precision.

Compare this to the much more vertical pull-rod orientation being more aligned with the vertical loads and motion of the rear suspension that need to be controlled.
The RB carries way more angle/leverage advantage in pushrod form than that example given. It doesn't appear to be any more limited than the typical pull rod orientation from that aspect.
Could be Merc/AM are trying to mitigate the higher CG of the push-rod configuration by going more extreme.

Just a thought on why Ferrari don’t feel the need to go push-rod at the back: does not having the split-turbo with compressor at the front of the engine afford them the ability to move the whole engine forward and so buying them room down low in the gearbox spacer area to fit their pull-rod arrangement?

Farnborough
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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I know we're in Ferrari thread, but confined to speculative view and valid comparison pull v push topic.

For comparison the RB collective gearbox and suspension



The torsion bars seem to extend down to about crankshaft level on that one, with quite considerable hardware sitting above exhaust through channel. Haven't a god comparison image with Ferrari installation, but presumably the torsions are similarly located for axis but coming up from bottom instead.

I can see the view of concern about cog and why there'd be interest in reducing that, but a are RB using that plus centre line cooling to perhaps migrate the notional roll centre higher during low speed (less downforce) to leverage different mechanical grip in that scenario as opposed to high load/speed downforce ?
Last years Ferrari appeared to hold the just a little amount of upper hand in real high speed lateral situation. Could that be why they've held with pull rod type installation ?

Andi76
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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stonehenge wrote:
20 Jan 2024, 23:01
I think it’s fair, though, to say that AMR, McLaren, and Mercedes have sounded more bullish than Ferrari. Personally, I am a little worried by Cardile’s comments about the importance of suspension and setup being overrated. That seems to be what caught out Mercedes for two years. Red Bull’s “secret” was that their stable platform allowed them to hit the perfect balance every single time. Well, except for Singapore, and you saw what happened there…
I know you don't mean it like that, but
when I hear phrases like "stable platform" in connection with the expression "the secret of", I always ask myself - is it really possible that many F1 engineers of today are such "technical idiots" that they no longer know the basic things that belong to a good racing car, or is there just an incredible amount of nonsense being written in the media and elsewhere these days? I mean - even back in 1994, with the return to passive suspension, it became obvious how important a stable platform is in F1. While Benetton with Ross Brawn and Rory Byrne recognized this and put a lot of work into the suspension and the highest possible "platform control" (there was a clever mechanical system on the B194 to control the ride height of the car) and adapted the aerodynamics to the passive suspension, a certain Adrian Newey was surprised by this and the Williams FW16 started the season with far too peaky aerodynamics and poor platform control. So it became very clear 30 years ago (and not only then) how important it is to have a stable aero platform. Even drivers - there are some nice reports on this about Michael Schumacher, which some of you may remember here - tried to keep the "aerodynamic platform" as stable as possible in order to get more performance out of the car. And before 1994 - active suspension... what was the aim of active suspension? Yes, exactly. A stable platform and platform control.So if a stable platform really is a secret even if "the old" generation of F1 engineers obviously spent a lot of time on platform control - then either today's F1 engineers are technical idiots who have lost sight of not only the basics of F1 car design but also its history because of all the data and details, or else there is simply far too much nonsense being written in the press and elsewhere. The answer is for everyone to find out for themselves. If someone asked me I would say that Red Bulls had slightly better platform control than others. Not that it was their "secret" , because a stable platform is not a secret, everyone tries to achieve that within their means.and that it is a combination of many things, not just one, that brings success. This polemic with expressions like "the secret" is what gives the wrong impression to many people who are not so well informed.
Last edited by Andi76 on 13 Feb 2024, 07:14, edited 1 time in total.

jambuka
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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Will Rory Byrne be present at the car unveil ?

dialtone
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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In general, and no offense to this forum, if a user on the internet figures something out, then f1 engineers figured it as well.

This is like the difference between the top soccer/football/nba/whatever players and the serie B/g-league/lower ranked tournament players. Pros are just another level, if they make a call on a trade off, it was probably the right call given the data they had.

stonehenge
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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Andi76 wrote:
13 Feb 2024, 04:22
stonehenge wrote:
20 Jan 2024, 23:01
I think it’s fair, though, to say that AMR, McLaren, and Mercedes have sounded more bullish than Ferrari. Personally, I am a little worried by Cardile’s comments about the importance of suspension and setup being overrated. That seems to be what caught out Mercedes for two years. Red Bull’s “secret” was that their stable platform allowed them to hit the perfect balance every single time. Well, except for Singapore, and you saw what happened there…
I know you don't mean it like that, but
when I hear phrases like "stable platform" in connection with the expression "the secret of", I always ask myself - is it really possible that many F1 engineers of today are such "technical idiots" that they no longer know the basic things that belong to a good racing car, or is there just an incredible amount of nonsense being written in the media and elsewhere these days? I mean - even back in 1994, with the return to passive suspension, it became obvious how important a stable platform is in F1. While Benetton with Ross Brawn and Rory Byrne recognized this and put a lot of work into the suspension and the highest possible "platform control" (there was a clever mechanical system on the B194 to control the ride height of the car) and adapted the aerodynamics to the passive suspension, a certain Adrian Newey was surprised by this and the Williams FW16 started the season with far too pointed aerodynamics and poor platform control. So it became very clear 30 years ago (and not only then) how important it is to have a stable aero platform. Even drivers - there are some nice reports on this about Michael Schumacher, which some of you may remember here - tried to keep the "aerodynamic platform" as stable as possible in order to get more performance out of the car. And before 1994 - active suspension... what was the aim of active suspension? Yes, exactly. A stable platform and platform control.So if a stable platform really is a secret even if "the old" generation of F1 engineers obviously spent a lot of time on platform control - then either today's F1 engineers are technical idiots who have lost sight of not only the basics of F1 car design but also its history because of all the data and details, or else there is simply far too much nonsense being written in the press and elsewhere. The answer is for everyone to find out for themselves. If someone asked me I would say that Red Bulls had slightly better platform control than others. Not that it was their "secret" , because a stable platform is not a secret, everyone tries to achieve that within their means.and that it is a combination of many things, not just one, that brings success. This polemic with expressions like "the secret" is what gives the wrong impression to many people who are not so well informed.
I completely agree, that's why I put "secret" in scare quotes; it's not a secret! Red Bull didn't have a magic bullet. They've just done everything a little better than everyone else.

Andi76
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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jambuka wrote:
13 Feb 2024, 04:39
Will Rory Byrne be present at the car unveil ?
He will not. Firstly, Rory doesn't like all this hype at all, even as chief-designer he would have preferred not to go to the presentation. And secondly, he's now back at home. So if, contrary to all expectations, he is there after all, that means something big in terms of his role. And that he is no longer just a consultant, but actually the leading engineer for the design of the cars. Which at the age of 80 and his attitude (working for Ferrari yes, full-time - no way) is highly unlikely.
Present will be Vasseur, Gualtieri and Cardille and of course both drivers.

jambuka
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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Is there a car thread created already ?

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Vanja #66
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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Yes, it will be unlocked when there are photos to discuss

viewtopic.php?t=31510
AeroGimli.x

And they call it a stall. A STALL!

#DwarvesAreNaturalSprinters
#BlessYouLaddie

Farnborough
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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stonehenge wrote:
13 Feb 2024, 05:22
Andi76 wrote:
13 Feb 2024, 04:22
stonehenge wrote:
20 Jan 2024, 23:01
I think it’s fair, though, to say that AMR, McLaren, and Mercedes have sounded more bullish than Ferrari. Personally, I am a little worried by Cardile’s comments about the importance of suspension and setup being overrated. That seems to be what caught out Mercedes for two years. Red Bull’s “secret” was that their stable platform allowed them to hit the perfect balance every single time. Well, except for Singapore, and you saw what happened there…
I know you don't mean it like that, but
when I hear phrases like "stable platform" in connection with the expression "the secret of", I always ask myself - is it really possible that many F1 engineers of today are such "technical idiots" that they no longer know the basic things that belong to a good racing car, or is there just an incredible amount of nonsense being written in the media and elsewhere these days? I mean - even back in 1994, with the return to passive suspension, it became obvious how important a stable platform is in F1. While Benetton with Ross Brawn and Rory Byrne recognized this and put a lot of work into the suspension and the highest possible "platform control" (there was a clever mechanical system on the B194 to control the ride height of the car) and adapted the aerodynamics to the passive suspension, a certain Adrian Newey was surprised by this and the Williams FW16 started the season with far too pointed aerodynamics and poor platform control. So it became very clear 30 years ago (and not only then) how important it is to have a stable aero platform. Even drivers - there are some nice reports on this about Michael Schumacher, which some of you may remember here - tried to keep the "aerodynamic platform" as stable as possible in order to get more performance out of the car. And before 1994 - active suspension... what was the aim of active suspension? Yes, exactly. A stable platform and platform control.So if a stable platform really is a secret even if "the old" generation of F1 engineers obviously spent a lot of time on platform control - then either today's F1 engineers are technical idiots who have lost sight of not only the basics of F1 car design but also its history because of all the data and details, or else there is simply far too much nonsense being written in the press and elsewhere. The answer is for everyone to find out for themselves. If someone asked me I would say that Red Bulls had slightly better platform control than others. Not that it was their "secret" , because a stable platform is not a secret, everyone tries to achieve that within their means.and that it is a combination of many things, not just one, that brings success. This polemic with expressions like "the secret" is what gives the wrong impression to many people who are not so well informed.
I completely agree, that's why I put "secret" in scare quotes; it's not a secret! Red Bull didn't have a magic bullet. They've just done everything a little better than everyone else.
Agree with a dislike in use of word such as the secret to X in such a technically concise sport.

However, it does seem like some of the teams thinking had not taken much, or significant enough note, of potential to lose control of vertical frequency through porpoise effect. The outflow of those decisions taking at least six months to bring some measure of mitigation to their design, aided by directive from FIA to lift certain parts in achieving this.

It does also appear that it took a long period for some design team to grasp just how involved and detailed the whole strategy needed to be in making full use of these new tyre and size characteristic. Some of them still not there at end of 23 season.

John Barard relays a story when a Mr Schumacher arrived at Ferrari......testing previous car, the last V12...which was fast, got out and claimed he could have won the championship and that and loved the characteristic within it.
Testing the new V10 and was slower with much more critical appraisal of that one.
The reason given was the V12 had far more off throttle engine braking...a characteristic that Barnard described both Alesi and Berger has vociferously complained off...stating it limited their pace as they felt they had far to much rear end braking to give finite control.....you can guess where this was from Schumacher stance...absolutely loved that pointed front and easily rotated rear end combination to match his driving desires :mrgreen:

Barnard stating that one of the highest priority in V10 was a reduction in off throttle frictional activity in response to high driver criticism of V12....you could almost hear him rolling his eyes writing that :D

Just goes to show how much a driver demand and engineering resoponse can take a certain path that may or may not be productive.

This easily trimmed by regen/closed throttle response etc now.

sypack
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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Here is the link to the live launch event.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04TsqI1lUV8

f1rules
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organic
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Re: Ferrari SF-24 speculation

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Some very interesting halo fairings

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