Yes, they aren't the first doing it (didn't say that either ). It's however not you see on most other cars. Marussia did something similar, although less complex-like shaped.Advino116 wrote:Not sure if they are the first to do that? I think Sauber's FW near the neutral section has the same overall shape but is even more complex than Ferrari's? I think Ferrari's should be more effective though, judging from the strength of their budget.turbof1 wrote:I'm currently working on drawings of the wing, so I'm having my nose deep into its details - and it has lots of them.
Ferrari have dropped their overall wing philosophy in favor of a more Mercedes-alike one. However, what they did not drop is how they shape their elements in complex shapes. With most other teams I've found that they tent to use a seperate part of bodywork for sudden and drastic changes in the 3 dimensional shape surface. Ferrari however tries more to keep things within the same part. For instance their main plane is truly a masterpiece. Other teams usually connect seperate elements to the neutral section and stack them there. Ferrari however molded those into one piece, with a slot inbetween, and has a very complex shape close to the neutral section. I think they want to create spanwise flow at that region.
http://i.imgur.com/ZVX7Fen.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/ksQZS5D.jpg
I'll wait till the article to see what you are referring to though. Could be you are seeing and understanding something I don't
There are other things though. Like the uppermost element have at its top a very specific bend. I personally believe they are recreating the effect red bull/mclaren are creating with their strake at that same position.