as massa ripped his front suspension on his ferrari?Lorenzo_Bandini wrote:Even LMP1 car can take kerbs hard now. F1 cars are design to take kerbs agressively.
as massa ripped his front suspension on his ferrari?Lorenzo_Bandini wrote:Even LMP1 car can take kerbs hard now. F1 cars are design to take kerbs agressively.
To be honest I don't think anyone can tell if they are 1 second off the pace, even mercedes cant know. Simply because they dont know what "the pace" is. The only thing that they can know is if they were running light on soft tyres and cars were going away from them in testing. Even then they cant know how how far off the pace they are as they dont know how light the other cars are.clipsy1H wrote:John192 wrote:Well firstly i would like to say i am not saying Lewis does or did cause car problems but a driver can very much influence the cars reliability. Messing your gear changes, bouncing over the curbs and many other things a driver can do could cause the issues you mention.n smikle wrote:The car was unreliable. You really think a driver can destroy a computer modulated gearbox and destroy a fuel pickup? Even Schumacher 8 DNF's last year were not down to him, and he is known as one of the best car nursers around.
Also the Schumacher example is just wrong because i can name at least 2 of his DNF's that were his faultyou can name just 2 mistake for Michael (Barcelona and Singapore)... so if in Australia gearbox stop work it's Lewis fault?
or if DRS remain open?
by the way according with this -> http://www.crash.net/f1/news/188277/1/h ... ances.html
car is around 1 sec off the pace.
Massa was over the kerb.winth304 wrote:as massa ripped his front suspension on his ferrari?Lorenzo_Bandini wrote:Even LMP1 car can take kerbs hard now. F1 cars are design to take kerbs agressively.
No he hit the kerb.Lorenzo_Bandini wrote:Massa was over the kerb.winth304 wrote:as massa ripped his front suspension on his ferrari?Lorenzo_Bandini wrote:Even LMP1 car can take kerbs hard now. F1 cars are design to take kerbs agressively.
A failure due to accident is not a reliability problem. A reliability problem is when a part or systems fails under no external influence.winth304 wrote:as massa ripped his front suspension on his ferrari?Lorenzo_Bandini wrote:Even LMP1 car can take kerbs hard now. F1 cars are design to take kerbs agressively.
found this on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... gsNA#t=55sringo wrote:A failure due to accident is not a reliability problem. A reliability problem is when a part or systems fails under no external influence.winth304 wrote:as massa ripped his front suspension on his ferrari?Lorenzo_Bandini wrote:Even LMP1 car can take kerbs hard now. F1 cars are design to take kerbs agressively.
I'd also suggest that poorly designed inlets and outlets, as well as poor internal aerodynamic design altogether, can cause lift, which would negate downforce generated elsewhere.khaliweed wrote:just a quick question: what factors could contribute to more downforce on an F1 car? I just think of the FW
Without accurate models of the car, and a powerful wind tunnel, plus several months of research, no. All you're doing is guessing, and all anyone else would be doing is the same.The FOZ wrote:I'd also suggest that poorly designed inlets and outlets, as well as poor internal aerodynamic design altogether, can cause lift, which would negate downforce generated elsewhere.khaliweed wrote:just a quick question: what factors could contribute to more downforce on an F1 car? I just think of the FW
Can anyone confirm this theory?
Could someone elaborate a bit on internal aerodynamics in general terms?The FOZ wrote:I'd also suggest that poorly designed inlets and outlets, as well as poor internal aerodynamic design altogether, can cause lift, which would negate downforce generated elsewhere.khaliweed wrote:just a quick question: what factors could contribute to more downforce on an F1 car? I just think of the FW
Can anyone confirm this theory?
Most of the downforce is achieved by the FW, floor and Rear Wing.khaliweed wrote:just a quick question: what factors could contribute to more downforce on an F1 car? I just think of the FW
this isn't a car failure.... was absolutely normal... what you can expect when he hit with over 140 kph the kerb? if you look closely you'll see that he touched grass first and after hit the curb and between these two is a difference in height.winth304 wrote: found this on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... gsNA#t=55s
imho a suspension should withstand such driving "incidents" more than a schumacher or hamilton overdrivers the engine.