Tale of two cannons.
Surely not. It's much extended to be just structural. Besides, nothing's really "just structural" when when it's exposed to the airflow.Papi Chulo wrote: β30 Jun 2023, 12:24That is for wing support. Also huge loads on that, just structural.Just_a_fan wrote: β30 Jun 2023, 10:44I did wonder if he was referring to the wing-body fairing (it's referenced below the picture of the Red Bull), but my understanding of that fairing is that it's more to do with the Area Rule approach to reducing transonic drag and so not really relevant to an F1 car.Papi Chulo wrote: β30 Jun 2023, 08:09My first post here, but had step in. These fairings are not for low drag. I am an aviator and these are a support for the flaps, the flaps have huge loads on them.
The Alfa is really enourmous, no other team is that big.vorticism wrote: β01 Jul 2023, 20:44Tale of two cannons.
https://cdn-2.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... l60-1.webp
https://cdn-2.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... c43-1.webp
It stands out, almost as wide as the diffuser. I see things like this and assume it has to do with less optimized internals, or running mid field or end of pack. Alpine also runs lots of cooling exit (big louvers + medium size cannon). Which got me thinking that Alfa might be intentionally large for external aero rather than totally about cooling. The cannon is WIDE but not tall (full round corners per min radius [100mm?]). That said they don't have to run louvers...Sevach wrote: β02 Jul 2023, 09:14The Alfa is really enourmous, no other team is that big.vorticism wrote: β01 Jul 2023, 20:44Tale of two cannons.
https://cdn-2.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... l60-1.webp
https://cdn-2.motorsport.com/images/mgl ... c43-1.webp
Somewhat weird given that Ferrari and Haas that run the same engine have the smallest rear exits.
IMHO, Audi needs to bring some help to this tech department and quick.
Look how shallow the RB front floor is. It slopes down at a much more obtuse angle than the Ferrari in front. Ferrari is almost flat by the time they get to the strakes, whereas RB continues all the way down the car almost to the centre point.Vanja #66 wrote: β04 Jul 2023, 09:40Outwash generation has evolved to allow for decent full-length undercuts as demonstrated by both cars, by using big bump geometry on the sidepods. This creates a narrow channel for the rear part of the undercut with converging undercut under the intake - where the pressurisation takes place. So instead of a blunt, draggy design of F1-75 and early AMR23 with a "simple" outwash intake undercut, this solution allows for less frontal area for a decent outwash effect.
https://storage.googleapis.com/fp-media ... errari.jpg
SiLo wrote: β07 Jul 2023, 16:16Look how shallow the RB front floor is. It slopes down at a much more obtuse angle than the Ferrari in front. Ferrari is almost flat by the time they get to the strakes, whereas RB continues all the way down the car almost to the centre point.Vanja #66 wrote: β04 Jul 2023, 09:40Outwash generation has evolved to allow for decent full-length undercuts as demonstrated by both cars, by using big bump geometry on the sidepods. This creates a narrow channel for the rear part of the undercut with converging undercut under the intake - where the pressurisation takes place. So instead of a blunt, draggy design of F1-75 and early AMR23 with a "simple" outwash intake undercut, this solution allows for less frontal area for a decent outwash effect.
https://storage.googleapis.com/fp-media ... errari.jpg
vorticism wrote: β29 Jun 2023, 21:15
I think they're the only one doing this because their sidepod undercut is pushed farther forward than other teams, corresponding with this steep floor ramp, everything is more compressed forward. If it was swept back like RB or McL the bulb cover would need to be even larger. As well since their floor is so low so far forward, they might not be able to hide a SIPS in there without a huge cover. So, we might be looking at the two choices depending on legality boxes:
SIPS high in sidepod when floor is low in region (Ferrari)
SIPS low in floor when floor is high in region (RB, McL, AMF1)
It's not quite down the middle of the allowed height, but yeah, RB hadn't changed the floor inlet since Bahrain. Ferrari did it twice and they raised the outboard height both times.
It puzzles me as why so many people think they have copied Red Bull? That water slide came from Ferrari and Aston did a bit of hybrid of Red Bull and Ferrari. Then Ferrari started moving more towards Aston in their side pod design, while Aston also started diverging. May be there is a bit of relevance to floor, but that's about it. None of them have copied Red Bull's anti dive front suspension. If anything, Aston, Ferrari and McLaren look a lot similar. Now Williams moving towards that.chrisc90 wrote: β09 Jul 2023, 14:32The McLaren that supposedly looks like a RB19 according to Lewis. Looks more like the AMR if you ask me!
https://i.postimg.cc/Wpg8vqTN/mclRB.jpg