Interesting slots on the diffuser of the C42, I haven’t seeing them in any other car yet I believe.
Vía @LuisFeF1
The Floor-Body reference volume stipulates only continuous cross sections so this should rule out slots. The CFD guys may know better than I, perhaps they can confirm. We see scallops in the diffuser edges on various cars, because they do not produce additional cross sections, but not holes/slots. If cuts like this were allowed I'd imagine all the cars' diffusers would be much more complex already.
When I first saw this I thought that it looked as though the rear wheel deflector has been interlocked into the diffuser wall. Are they using what looks like a pocket as a sliding bearing?SmallSoldier wrote: ↑04 Mar 2022, 22:39Interesting slots on the diffuser of the C42, I haven’t seeing them in any other car yet I believe.
https://i.imgur.com/lWDAUrj.jpg
Vía @LuisFeF1
Pretty sure they're both reflections. The small one is a reflection cut in half due to the matte finish body wrap (it disappears in the image below). The taller one is where the diffuser wall thickness steps down. From cored to solid CF. This wouldn't befall the minimum radius rules, but could still provide a face for these reflections.jjn9128 wrote: ↑05 Mar 2022, 13:25They're definitely slots - and as far as my understanding goes, completely illegal. They don't conform to tangent continuous surface, they don't conform to only a single section in any x or y plane, they don't conform to a minimum convex or concave radius of 25mm, and they're taller than 65mm where the minimum radius bit doesn't apply (only for the diffuser endfence).
This picture could be evidence of a split turbo setup for the new ferrari engine.ojir19 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2022, 01:03wastegate exit, comparison with Ferrari WG
https://i.postimg.cc/BQCM24tm/C42-st-Ba ... 16-XXX.jpg
https://i.postimg.cc/J4YYSpxm/F175-celo ... ua-XXX.jpg
The Ferrari has always looked like that (or at least since many seasons). With the compressor located inside the V and a turbine very close to the V. So the Ferrari kinda looks like a split-turbo engine, from behind...ringo wrote: ↑07 Mar 2022, 19:14This picture could be evidence of a split turbo setup for the new ferrari engine.ojir19 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2022, 01:03wastegate exit, comparison with Ferrari WG
https://i.postimg.cc/BQCM24tm/C42-st-Ba ... 16-XXX.jpg
https://i.postimg.cc/J4YYSpxm/F175-celo ... ua-XXX.jpg
There does not seem to be as much bulk at the back of the unit.