![Image](https://i.imgur.com/5pZ2XkM.png)
There was also someone mentioning a section in TV program GP Confidential about FIA banning the RB20 extra rear damper reservoirs as of Miami:
Could this explain the RB20s sudden drop of pace (and top speed) advantage?
Absolutely, a lot more realistic than the differential brake.
Seems like Red Bull had this type of system for quite some time now: https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/for ... ison-2022/.poz wrote: ↑16 Sep 2024, 16:09Absolutely, a lot more realistic than the differential brake.
those ground effect cars have a huge problem: the center of pressure of the floor moves backward as the air speed increase and the car suffer form under steer
actually there are two way to mitigate this problem:
controlling the ride height (and the rake) with a clever suspension (RB and probably Ferrari in 2024, after Miami RB-Ferrari relative performance remain unchanged with Mclaren ad Mercedes catching up)
with a flexible front wing (Mclaren and then MB): actually i haven't understand if the flexible front wing compensate the under steering generating more load thanks to the wing tips closer to the ground or they actually control the air flux going under the floor
I think Red Bull brought a new suspension at Bahrain (the 2nd test) which greatly improved their performance and removed porpoising, so the FIA inspecting it carefully at Barcelona wouldn't have shown them the true picture.Alexf1 wrote: ↑16 Sep 2024, 16:32Seems like Red Bull had this type of system for quite some time now: https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/for ... ison-2022/.poz wrote: ↑16 Sep 2024, 16:09Absolutely, a lot more realistic than the differential brake.
those ground effect cars have a huge problem: the center of pressure of the floor moves backward as the air speed increase and the car suffer form under steer
actually there are two way to mitigate this problem:
controlling the ride height (and the rake) with a clever suspension (RB and probably Ferrari in 2024, after Miami RB-Ferrari relative performance remain unchanged with Mclaren ad Mercedes catching up)
with a flexible front wing (Mclaren and then MB): actually i haven't understand if the flexible front wing compensate the under steering generating more load thanks to the wing tips closer to the ground or they actually control the air flux going under the floor
No wonder Ross Brawn and Pat Symonds came to take a close look from the very first 2022 pre-season test: https://www.gpblog.com/en/news/105344/f ... elona.html
Indeed there were reports over the winter that Ferrari adopted such a system for 2024: https://scuderiafans.com/f1-sf-24-ferra ... rabian-gp/
Having to do without it after Miami could explain Ferraris drop in performance too.
Is there any possibility that Rob Marshall said "Hey FIA, take a closer look at this and that on the RB20"?Alexf1 wrote: ↑16 Sep 2024, 16:32Seems like Red Bull had this type of system for quite some time now: https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/for ... ison-2022/.poz wrote: ↑16 Sep 2024, 16:09Absolutely, a lot more realistic than the differential brake.
those ground effect cars have a huge problem: the center of pressure of the floor moves backward as the air speed increase and the car suffer form under steer
actually there are two way to mitigate this problem:
controlling the ride height (and the rake) with a clever suspension (RB and probably Ferrari in 2024, after Miami RB-Ferrari relative performance remain unchanged with Mclaren ad Mercedes catching up)
with a flexible front wing (Mclaren and then MB): actually i haven't understand if the flexible front wing compensate the under steering generating more load thanks to the wing tips closer to the ground or they actually control the air flux going under the floor
No wonder Ross Brawn and Pat Symonds came to take a close look from the very first 2022 pre-season test: https://www.gpblog.com/en/news/105344/f ... elona.html
Indeed there were reports over the winter that Ferrari adopted such a system for 2024: https://scuderiafans.com/f1-sf-24-ferra ... rabian-gp/
Having to do without it after Miami could explain Ferraris drop in performance too.
They talk so much about aerodynamic balance being off, that I can only imagine they would like to have as much freedom as possible with playing with ballast. Even if the two are not directly connected, one might help to balance the other?bananapeel23 wrote: ↑19 Sep 2024, 13:19With Red Bull refusing to do a special livery for Singapore and Austin out of weight concerns. Does this mean that the RB20 is overweight, or are they just so incredibly concerned about car performance that the microscopic change in center of gravity that a few hundred grams of paint would bring over ballast is too much for them?
In low speed corners, the mass distribution will have a larger effect, so it is possible.Paa wrote: ↑19 Sep 2024, 14:23They talk so much about aerodynamic balance being off, that I can only imagine they would like to have as much freedom as possible with playing with ballast. Even if the two are not directly connected, one might help to balance the other?bananapeel23 wrote: ↑19 Sep 2024, 13:19With Red Bull refusing to do a special livery for Singapore and Austin out of weight concerns. Does this mean that the RB20 is overweight, or are they just so incredibly concerned about car performance that the microscopic change in center of gravity that a few hundred grams of paint would bring over ballast is too much for them?
I think after Sergio's crash the rush in which extra (spare) parts have to be produced and immediately shipped to Singapore makes it impossible to have these also painted in the special livery in timeAR3-GP wrote: ↑19 Sep 2024, 16:31In low speed corners, the mass distribution will have a larger effect, so it is possible.Paa wrote: ↑19 Sep 2024, 14:23They talk so much about aerodynamic balance being off, that I can only imagine they would like to have as much freedom as possible with playing with ballast. Even if the two are not directly connected, one might help to balance the other?bananapeel23 wrote: ↑19 Sep 2024, 13:19With Red Bull refusing to do a special livery for Singapore and Austin out of weight concerns. Does this mean that the RB20 is overweight, or are they just so incredibly concerned about car performance that the microscopic change in center of gravity that a few hundred grams of paint would bring over ballast is too much for them?