Because of the DRS actuator in the middle of the front of DRS flap holding that area rigid , the force is on the top of the top of the DRS Flap being pushed back and forcing the deformation of the only other part that can bend, the front outside edges.Emag wrote: ↑15 Sep 2024, 19:04I am looking at it a bit more now and I was thinking that perhaps the tips are not what is flexing but rather the elements around the top flap are flexing in a way that is increasing the DRS gap under load.
Specifically this area around the top flap of the rear wing :
https://i.imgur.com/6XSLH0q.png
If you make the top connector more rigid, it will pull the top down while taking the sides down with them too, which would create this effect of bigger separation at the tips.
This way, the top flap (DRS flap) is technically staying motionless, but the other parts are moving around it to open the gap.
Maybe that's how they kept it within the rules.
I really doubt they brought an illegal car in the middle of a title fight and risk disqualification, but who knows. Even if it is technically legal, the FIA may intervene here.
Simple but clever. Are the outside edges at the front of the flap are the symptom of a bigger gain?
If you place your mouse at the top of the rear wing on the video and play, you can see it deform, the amount of flex at the top of the RW is actually quite big and I'd be surprise if that is only worth a couple of kph. There is definitely a lot of flex in the top of that flap.
Not having seen any other rear wings yet, I haven't compared to other cars.
Edit: Did a screenshot, the actuator is a handy demonstration of the flex. The outer edges of the top of the flap are else being deformed and pushed back, but I suspect less so than the centre due to being attached to the pivot mechanism. But you can clearly see a lot of flex at the top of that DRS flap. How much to the other RW flex at the top?