mwillems wrote: ↑22 Feb 2024, 14:37
From what I learnt last year there is a really close connection between the rear wing and the beam wing, in that the amount of air being pushed underneath the rear wing has to correlate nicely to the amount of air going over the rear wing to maintain an optimal pressure difference that allows output of the diffuser to be energised and sucked from the car.
Yet here we have two cars using similar (ish) rear wings and totally different levels of Beam Wing. What does this indicate about the airflow to the rear of both of these cars? Does anyone have any insight?
Those two + the floor are working very closely and very hard. Those 3 elements are the main drivers of the downforce performance, while the front wing is there almost solely to balance the car out with these rules. It's very important they work together and not against each other, but their bodywork rule boxes are far enough not to make that a potentially serious issue. In my experience, with hard-working elements, you shouldn't put them together closer than 100-150% chord of the main element (rear wing in this case), depending on camber and AoA. This condition is met even with Monaco-spec packages
You'll find some great CFD results for visual comparisons in these 2 threads
viewtopic.php?t=28657
viewtopic.php?t=30734
In case of Macca vs Merc, it's different beam wing philosophies probably looking at different effects when combined together etc. Merc seems like Monaco-spec beam wing which is absolutely too much for Bahrain type of track