Before 2014, this only happened in the second half of 2013 and in monza 2011, and certainly not "always".Blaze1 wrote:RBR have always run skinnier rear wings than other teams however, even when they were dominating in the V8 era.
From what I recall if was pretty standard on their set-ups.Juzh wrote:Before 2014, this only happened in the second half of 2013 and in monza 2011, and certainly not "always".Blaze1 wrote:RBR have always run skinnier rear wings than other teams however, even when they were dominating in the V8 era.
Juzh wrote:Nope.
If you remember any specific examples other than the ones I mentioned plz share them.
Here are some from 2012:Juzh wrote:Nope.
If you remember any specific examples other than the ones I mentioned plz share them.
"The major problem we had to deal with, affects the internal combustion engine and the direct injection, explains Cyril Abiteboul. The knocking is the major problem that we experienced in 2014 and we are working on it for the new season.
That's one of the reasons we called Illmor
We entrusted Mario Illien's engineers a project study related to the internal combustion engine. The idea is to cross our ideas and theirs, to eliminate the least efficient solutions.»
Interesting!Blackout wrote:So according to Abiteboul, the main problem was knocking:
But Abiteboul also said they stick with the non-split-turbo-layout because they feel it's the better solution for them.henra wrote: Could that also be due to higher temperature of the air fed into the cylinders caused by the missing separation of hot and cold side of the Turbo?
They forgot to factor in the effects of Global warminghenra wrote: Apart from that why should Renault encounter such an age old Turbo ICE Problem nowadays? What was different from their assumptions?