Time.
Time in CFD, time in the WT, time in the simulator, time building the moulds, time making the parts - it all has a $/hr figure attached to it and likely is much more than the simple physical resource costs.
Time.
How much can they learn at Monaco?
Monaco isn’t ideal but something more than nothing. I guess it may also mean that zeropod has been totally abandoned & they won’t be carrying over anything from before moving forward.
Maybe limited for this appearance, but quite significant for next year in my view. If they find this route productive and yealding performance such that championship 24 is more realistic, then this week could prove valuable in data accumulation.
But if there are so many benefits to an anti-dive setup, why doesn't everybody use it as default?Farnborough wrote: ↑25 May 2023, 13:13
Quite a decent direct comparison in side by side illustration here, of front suspension geometry shift.
Monaco has bumps just like every other track, I think the suspension will be tested mostly here
There are some many detail changes that it's not practical to rebuild a car from one design to the other in the time available between sessions.
I don’t believe we’ve seen anything that indicates the car will be more/less supple over kerbs & bumps; that’s not really what the suspension revision is aimed at advancing.
I don't believe it was so much a correlation issue, more one of where there car needed to be run in to make the simulations valid was not where it could run in the real world. Example, if you could find a billiard table smooth race track to enable to run at their intended 2022 ride height, they had masses of downforce. But the real world is not billiard table smooth.
Last yr HAM was testing well into the second practice session, only converging on setup in P3 (and often changing setup again for quali). I guess maybe I’m alone in thinking the focus should be on testing, I’ve been out of the loop for a bit but are they confident the correlation issue is in the rearview?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑25 May 2023, 13:27There are some many detail changes that it's not practical to rebuild a car from one design to the other in the time available between sessions.
Agreed, but how it performs under braking etc. will probably be on the testing list214270 wrote: ↑25 May 2023, 13:28I don’t believe we’ve seen anything that indicates the car will be more/less supple over kerbs & bumps; that’s not really what the suspension revision is aimed at advancing.
I think it was more than that. Mismatched data between racetrack and sim because of model inaccuraciesMartin Keene wrote: ↑25 May 2023, 13:32I don't believe it was so much a correlation issue, more one of where there car needed to be run in to make the simulations valid was not where it could run in the real world. Example, if you could find a billiard table smooth race track to enable to run at their intended 2022 ride height, they had masses of downforce. But the real world is not billiard table smooth.