I hope they don't bring active suspension which Horner also mentioned. I don't like the way active suspension cars don't roll, pitch or dive, it looks very strange.
I hope they don't bring active suspension which Horner also mentioned. I don't like the way active suspension cars don't roll, pitch or dive, it looks very strange.
I was more in the line of thinking about active aero. I've asked because of the new engine regs for 2026, in which they have to assure sufficient grip under braking for recovering 350kW only by means of the rear axle... Using active aero.
Im for it, in a limited form, give the control of the front wing back to the driver, allow one change per lap by half a degree at a time. The Rear DRS id keep, however id limit its use as I've said before, give the drivers 300 seconds every session, however the drivers have to use it more tactically.
If Active Aero is coming, is it possible that Active Suspension is coming to allow the drivers to tune the underfloor every race? Id say there's a possibility, id also say it would allow standardisation of suspension inboards, also allow the FIA to better police it with a new SECU.
I also listened to The Race podcast yesterday, when talking about the new engine rules, they also suggested putting a MGU on the front axle for the possible beefed up power regulations, and the would mean a Active Stability management could also come into F1. Im not for that, I just want all the power to go to the rear wheels, no ASM.
I hope they don't bring active suspension which Horner also mentioned. I don't like the way active suspension cars don't roll, pitch or dive, it looks very strange.
But you can't get a sense of the vehicle dynamics.
The way the Williams FW14B & FW15C stayed perfectly flat all the time, just looks very, very odd. It's very undramatic to watch.
We like to see the cars being hustled, and rolling, pitching, diving and squatting don't we? It adds to the theatre of a racecar on the limit.
It's your preference. Funnily enough, a previous generation of fan would have said "we want to see the cars sliding through the corners with opposite lock as it shows a car on the limit being balanced on the throttle."
My own preference is to see the high rate of direction change because that shows how insane these cars are - something that the camera angles often miss. We don't usually see much rolling and pitching in F1 anyway because the suspension is designed to limit it where necessary.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.
It's your preference. Funnily enough, a previous generation of fan would have said "we want to see the cars sliding through the corners with opposite lock as it shows a car on the limit being balanced on the throttle."
We still see that. It's just less than the 1970's because now they have radial tyres instead of the crossply tyres of the 1970's. The 70's cars did four wheel drifts, because that is the optimal slip angle range of a crossply tyre compared to the smaller optimal slip angle of a radial.
It's your preference. Funnily enough, a previous generation of fan would have said "we want to see the cars sliding through the corners with opposite lock as it shows a car on the limit being balanced on the throttle."
We still see that. It's just less than the 1970's because now they have radial tyres instead of the crossply tyres of the 1970's. The 70's cars did four wheel drifts, because that is the optimal slip angle range of a crossply tyre compared to the smaller optimal slip angle of a radial.
You'll only see oppo if it's gone wrong. Sliding ( in the old sense) is slow.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.
... "we want to see the cars sliding through the corners with opposite lock as it shows a car on the limit being balanced on the throttle."
.... You'll only see oppo if it's gone wrong. Sliding ( in the old sense) is slow.
aren't these 2 points rather contradictory ?
and ....
the first doesn't correctly describe (4-wheel) drifting
sliding died out when faulty design (inherent oversteer) was eliminated post-Olley starting in the late 1930s
Last edited by Tommy Cookers on 14 Oct 2021, 00:48, edited 1 time in total.
I heard through an F1 engineer who was at Merc that they were working on a proposal to use fans (active) for cars following to have a 'fan boost' increasing downforce... more importantly trying to get 'side by side' racing, not just DRS passes