what appendage are you talking about?Giblet wrote:Despite the fact it is internal, is not the internal bodywork of the SF15-T in the exclusion zone where such appendages are forbidden?
WTF?Manoah2u wrote:true, and the sauber is doing well, too.f1rules wrote:guess this confirms you dont need a anorectic body to be competitive in f1, a latina body is also an option, that rb compared to a chubby ferrari
http://img2.auto-motor-und-sport.de/Par ... 856521.jpg
interestingly though, the RedBull can't get skinnier, and seems at the max of its performance.
Meanwhile, the Ferrari probably CAN get skinnier by quite a measure, AND doesn't seem it's at the max of their performance.
Still I'm not sure RBR didn't find a different way to mess it up. One proven way to do this is having rigidity Problems somewhere in the Chassis/ Suspension. This often manifests itself in unpredictable over/understeer also in slow Corners. Looking at the behaviour of the Bulls I think I have seen signs of that. So the tighter Rear End might still be beneficial but it could be overshadowed/nullified by other issues.f1rules wrote:guess this confirms you dont need a anorectic body to be competitive in f1, a latina body is also an option, that rb compared to a chubby ferrari
"3.8.4Giblet wrote:http://somersf1.blogspot.co.uk/2015/04/ ... ckage.html
I wonder if these winglets exist as speculated and if so are they legal? If a team was to slap a bunch of winglets on the outside of the sidepods it would not be ok, so why is it OK on the inside? IIRC the rules involve measurements from the center line and floor which should include bodywork what's purpose is 'cooling' even though they have a cascade wing in there?
The number of elemnets (again if correct) seem like a mid cascade wing, where the other teams have one in the front and one in the rear only
---suddenly having issues posting successfully and doubling up.
One question, looking at the drawing of engine at the bottom picture it seems that Ferrari retained tubular exhaust piping. Is that right?aleks_ader wrote:Last years Ferrari PU 059/3
http://www.formulapassion.it/wp-content ... 36x291.jpg
This years "059/4"
https://twitter.com/AlbertFabrega/statu ... 3193539584
http://i60.tinypic.com/246jb47.jpg
Some good drawings
http://www.ccma.cat/tv3/alacarta/progra ... o/5501337/
But since the tuned mass damper... never mind!variante wrote:"3.8.4Giblet wrote:http://somersf1.blogspot.co.uk/2015/04/ ... ckage.html
I wonder if these winglets exist as speculated and if so are they legal? If a team was to slap a bunch of winglets on the outside of the sidepods it would not be ok, so why is it OK on the inside? IIRC the rules involve measurements from the center line and floor which should include bodywork what's purpose is 'cooling' even though they have a cascade wing in there?
The number of elemnets (again if correct) seem like a mid cascade wing, where the other teams have one in the front and one in the rear only
---suddenly having issues posting successfully and doubling up.
Any vertical cross section of bodywork normal to the car centre line situated in the volumes defined below must form one tangent continuous curve on its external surface. This tangent continuous curve may not contain any radius less than 75mm"
So, no restrictions on the inside of the pods. Otherwise, every mechanical component in contact with air (therefore "bodywork" by definition) would be deemed illegal.
This time there's no room for interpretation.hollus wrote:But since the tuned mass damper... never mind!
Where I meant to be really annoying is in that Giblet is right, what is "internal" anyways? Last time I checked the radiator could be largely seen from outside the car, and all cars are, topologically, some sort of triple doughnut anyways. The insides of the sidepods have to be "external" by definition to cool things using ambient air.
Without a proper definition of external, one could have any intricate shape (read illegal as per the radius rule above) made legal by sticking another "legal" element further away from the center of the car. The second element becoming the "external" one and thus making the intricate one "internal" and legal. Turning vanes outside the turning vanes anyone? How many opening can a sidepod have and still be a sidepod?
An interesting can of worms!
I know I am nitpicking, but interpreting that rule literally, one cannot have an ultrashort sidepod with its rear exit still inside the "volumes defined below", and I am quite sure that that was never the spirit of the rule.
Good catch, gents!
1.4 Bodywork :
All entirely sprung parts of the car in contact with the external air stream, except cameras, camera housings and the parts definitely associated with the mechanical functioning of the engine, transmission and running gear. Airboxes, radiators and engine exhausts are considered to be part of the bodywork.