ISLAMATRON wrote:Regardless the RBR clearly does have a lower CG then the rest of the cars on the grid.
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Just look at the suspension parts at the level of the step plane or lower even whereas on the Williams for example we can see the suspension components thru the sidepod exhausts situated higher than the entire crash structure.
Not saying that the lower CG is the entire reason they are fast, be it wet or dry... but they clearly do have a lower cg, then the rest of the field. I am fully expecting many cars to incorporate the pull rod suspension next year.
I'm sorry, but that picture honestly doesn't mean anything. Having been on the suspension design team for both a pull-rod and push-rod suspension...
Your a-arms don't change. No gain there.
Your push or pull rod doesn't really change either, with regard to mass location. One goes from top to bottom, the other goes from bottom to top.
I'm not sure how the torsion bar springs are aligned on this car, but they are inclined at least somewhat vertically. I'm not convinced there's much gain there.
The biggest thing you get to do is move the rockers, and the dampers down an appreciable difference. So you do get to move around a
couple pounds.
We can account for a couple pounds in that picture. ~0.3% of the car mass. What about the other 1415+ lb on a typical race-weight car? How could you conclusively say that all of that is located lower than any other car in the field? It might be, it might not be. There is absolutely no way for us to tell other than pure speculation.
Pull-rods are nothing new in open wheel, nor in F1. I know for sure one of the late 80's Ferraris ran them briefly. No one had forgotten about them, they've always been on the table. For McLaren, Ferrari, Brawn or anyone else... if a pull-rod suspension would have yielded a better racecar, they would have done it.
Copying the arrangement of 1 system of dozens on a racecar, just because they performed very well in a race, is not wise engineering.
Grip is a four letter word. All opinions are my own and not those of current or previous employers.