wesley123 wrote:HampusA wrote:Wing is designed to bridge the gap to the ground and thus making it efficient.
Indeed it is.
The bullshit about Rake that Horner say is disproven by watching a stationary pic of the car since the rake could only get less in higher speeds.
I cannot understand how you come to that assumption.
Stationary - wing is well above the ground - maximum rake unless we have active suspension on the RB7.
Top speed - wing touching the ground in some cases - Atleast the same rake as staionary could be slightly less due to all the downforce on the car.
If you have been brought up with the metric system, all it would take is throwing an eye on the pictures and you would realise that, that is not 2cm.
Therefore is breaches the rules, the wing is clearly designed to bridge the gap to the ground, it is clearly moving in regards to the rest of the car etc.
then Andrew will jump in and say well measure it. Well only FIA can do that because not even other teams are allowed near the RBR nor can they strap on their own measuring systems to the RBR to really see much it flexes.
An easy way for FIA would be to build some bar that goes from the nosecone out to the left or right with a sensor on it. then put a sensor on the far edge of the wing and tell them to do a top speed run during FP1. that way they will know exactly by how much the front wing flexes in real conditions.
Same could be done for testing if the nose actually does flex as some videos shows.
a bar 5 cm above the the front area of the cockpit goes straight out to the tip of the nosecone with sensors at both ends.
The truth will come out...