That sounds reasonable. The only argument I really have against that is that the SF71H had a more traditional approach to centerline cooling, yet also experimented a lot with halo ornamentation in a similar manner. Also the winglets, especially the 2024 ones, have been placed below and quite far away from the halo. These "cobra" winglets seem more adapted to deal with cockpit losses than halo losses, at least visually.CaribouBread wrote: ↑10 May 2024, 15:18Last year and early this year I asked myself the same question and this is the conclusion I got to,bananapeel23 wrote: ↑10 May 2024, 15:10Man, Ferrari really loves spending time on weird halo decorations.KimiRai wrote: ↑10 May 2024, 10:43https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GNNFa-3WEAA ... =4096x4096
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What purpose do they even serve? Is it akin to something like winglets on aircraft that aim to break up vortex formation and reduce drag downstram? Is it more of a flow conditioning thing meant to keep the airflow flowing off the halo nice and predictable when it hits the rear wing?
Currently Ferrari has a completely different approach to centerline packaging and cooling compared to every other team, they're the only ones to run the narrow airbox, thus I think, they might also have a different approach to dealing with cockpit losses and turbulence. The intricacy of their halo work is the manifestation of their low centerline philosophy in my opinion.
These winglets are so insanely confusing to me. I just can't imagine what they are supposed to accomplish, especially on the SF24. They are placed so close to, and align so closely with the bodywork that I just can't imagine what they do.