Regarding the flow-viz, I could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure it was just an asymmetrical livery for an FTX promotion.atanatizante wrote: ↑11 Jul 2022, 21:38https://postimages.org/
Is there a flow wiz paint on the endplate RW? On the right side, it`s a blue colour but interesting on the other side, it`s a yellow one ...
There are rumours saying they were trying (just with HAM in Silverstone FP1, due to lack of time and spares) some alteration of the back cooling in order to see had they could energise the RW more with the slot in the engine cover near the N letter, something that RB18 is trying now ...
Then, we could see a nice picture from the downwash that creates the new front suspension bodywork/fairings ...
That’s the way I see it as wellcontinuum16 wrote: ↑11 Jul 2022, 21:46Regarding the flow-viz, I could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure it was just an asymmetrical livery for an FTX promotion.atanatizante wrote: ↑11 Jul 2022, 21:38https://postimages.org/
Is there a flow wiz paint on the endplate RW? On the right side, it`s a blue colour but interesting on the other side, it`s a yellow one ...
There are rumours saying they were trying (just with HAM in Silverstone FP1, due to lack of time and spares) some alteration of the back cooling in order to see had they could energise the RW more with the slot in the engine cover near the N letter, something that RB18 is trying now ...
Then, we could see a nice picture from the downwash that creates the new front suspension bodywork/fairings ...
The cooling opening is there only for cooling purposes. Turbulent flow under the engine cover is too used-up to bring any benefit for flow energizing. On the other hand, if it starts mixing with colder air downstream, it might mess up cooling in that zone.atanatizante wrote: ↑11 Jul 2022, 21:38https://postimages.org/
Is there a flow wiz paint on the endplate RW? On the right side, it`s a blue colour but interesting on the other side, it`s a yellow one ...
There are rumours saying they were trying (just with HAM in Silverstone FP1, due to lack of time and spares) some alteration of the back cooling in order to see had they could energise the RW more with the slot in the engine cover near the N letter, something that RB18 is trying now ...
Then, we could see a nice picture from the downwash that creates the new front suspension bodywork/fairings ...
There was rain overnight before the main race and Leclerc asked for some changes to the car after the sprint race. So Sunday and Saturday were completely different in more ways than you mentioned. I don't think W13 is anywhere near the top two cars conceptually, they should come up with a solution for wider sidepods with a high inlet to test it this year. Otherwise, W14 will also be compromised.ringo wrote: ↑13 Jul 2022, 10:17When the cars start on full tanks, it seems Max (which is suspect) isn't so great at setting up for good race pace and explains his relatively poor sprint performances. W13, and in particular Hamilton, looks good when other cars have high deg due to poor setup work. The Ferarri was nowhere in the sprint because the low weight wasn't enough to stress the RB's tyres and reveal it's wrong setup. But as soon as the race came, the F175 showed why it compromised sprint pace for race pace.
While I normally read your posts and believe everything you say (given you 622 rating) I want to uneducatedly disagree with you here
I would trust the team of qualified aerodynamicists and engineers that won 8 in a row - right there with you. If wider pods were the magic bullet, everyone that switched would be leading or at least improving. How did that work out for the Williams and AMR?KeiKo403 wrote: ↑13 Jul 2022, 14:45While I normally read your posts and believe everything you say (given you 622 rating) I want to uneducatedly disagree with you here
There are other teams on the grid who have said as a concept the Merc design is quite good, I don’t know if that is just playing nice in public with some flattery but let’s not forget that Mercedes have the 3rd best concept right now. 7 other teams have done a worse job with (on the face of it) very similar concepts to what we could conceive as traditional designs.
Then there is talk of Ferrari & RedBull using loopholes in the rules which could be giving them some margin over the rest of the field which the FIA are looking to change, or not change, I haven’t yet caught up with the latest TD updates.
Overall I don’t think the Mercedes concept is wrong (not that you are saying it is)
Thank you for your technical and knowledgeable contributions on this forum though. If you do respond, be gentle
And if they bring an updated no-pods design next season, having learned from this season, and wipe the floor with everyone, will you still be of the opinion that the no-pods route is the wrong one?
Well yes, but you'd have to consider "winning on merit" as being competitive on all tracks. You can't win titles if your car only works on billard-table smooth circuits with fast corners.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Jul 2022, 16:06And if they bring an updated no-pods design next season, having learned from this season, and wipe the floor with everyone, will you still be of the opinion that the no-pods route is the wrong one?
There are high pods like the Red Bull and Ferrari that are behind Mercedes. There is a mini-pod and a big-pod design on track at the same time at Williams and the mini-pod car did better. AMR have had two versions of big-pod and languish around the back of the field even with the same drive train as the no-pod Merc.
What the two front runners have is an underfloor system that they are going to have to remove as it's possibly illegal.
If Mercedes end the season with a car that is capable of winning on merit, then changing to someone else's concept would be rather silly.
I think this is more what is going on. iic the aero-induced porpoising was something they literally could not have simulated as rules didn't allow for testing at the required airspeeds.
FTFYJust_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Jul 2022, 16:06And if they bring an updated no-pods design next season, having learned from this season, and wipe the floor with everyone, will you still be of the opinion that the no-pods route is the wrong one?
There are high pods like the Red Bull and Ferrari that are behind Mercedes. There is a mini-pod and a big-pod design on track at the same time at Williams and the mini-pod car did better. AMR have had two versions of big-pod and languish around the back of the field even with the same drive train as the no-pod Merc.
What the two front runners have is an underfloor system that is more effective over a wider range of operation.
If Mercedes end the season with a car that is capable of winning on merit, then changing to someone else's concept would be rather silly.
Williams has a completely different opinion on this. Sure you're not seeing what you want to see?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Jul 2022, 16:06
(...) There is a mini-pod and a big-pod design on track at the same time at Williams and the mini-pod car did better. (...)
Didn't need fixing, thanks. It was accurate as it was.Stu wrote: ↑13 Jul 2022, 19:48FTFYJust_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Jul 2022, 16:06And if they bring an updated no-pods design next season, having learned from this season, and wipe the floor with everyone, will you still be of the opinion that the no-pods route is the wrong one?
There are high pods like the Red Bull and Ferrari that are behind Mercedes. There is a mini-pod and a big-pod design on track at the same time at Williams and the mini-pod car did better. AMR have had two versions of big-pod and languish around the back of the field even with the same drive train as the no-pod Merc.
What the two front runners have is an underfloor system that is more effective over a wider range of operation.
If Mercedes end the season with a car that is capable of winning on merit, then changing to someone else's concept would be rather silly.
Agree removing the flexi plank system should bring the w13 closer to the top two.continuum16 wrote: ↑13 Jul 2022, 17:14I do not think the underfloor/plank thing will have huge competitive ramifications; RB have already said they don't have to do anything. Ferrari said they might have to make some changes but were not concerned.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Jul 2022, 16:06What the two front runners have is an underfloor system that they are going to have to remove as it's possibly illegal.