Formu1a.uno reports that the FW update has been brought forward to Singapore.
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Totally aimless team behavior right there.CouncilorIrissa wrote:Formu1a.uno reports that the FW update has been brought forward to Singapore.
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I've never called them aimless.dialtone wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 14:36Totally aimless team behavior right there.CouncilorIrissa wrote:Formu1a.uno reports that the FW update has been brought forward to Singapore.
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They are truly and utterly lostdialtone wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 14:36Totally aimless team behavior right there.CouncilorIrissa wrote:Formu1a.uno reports that the FW update has been brought forward to Singapore.
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What? Formu1a.uno themselves reported that the work on this wing began only a few weeks ago. They made an entire new front wing with new behaviour in 3-4 weeks when their original plan was 2 months?CouncilorIrissa wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 14:34Formu1a.uno reports that the FW update has been brought forward to Singapore.
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In Monza, Ferrari introduced most of the new features planned for the second part of the season, and so far, no issues have arisen from Maranello related to the functioning of these developments. According to our information, Ferrari has accelerated the development plans once again and will bring the new front wing—initially scheduled for Austin—to Singapore. The new wing is already en route to Marina Bay, ready to be mounted and tested by both Ferrari drivers. This decision was once again driven by Vasseur and Diego Tondi, who, after the 'all-in' at Monza, wanted to bring forward this last important component. A new wing is always an important element, perhaps the most crucial and nerve center of aerodynamics, as it is the first part of the car to impact the airflow, making it vital that it works as the aerodynamicists expect.
You're ignoring the angle as well as the curvature of the wings by taking the frontal perspective as the measure of load on all of them. Not only that, but you're also not accounting for the slight side shift considering the image is taken from an angle to the right instead of directly in front of them.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 13:37RB, McL and Ferrari flaps are basically the same size though.
viewtopic.php?p=1234625#p1234625
https://i.ibb.co/jgQDggQ/comp-spa-24.jpg
McLaren is pushing the limit and they have the right to do so. Obviously, FIA allowed it and it wasn't allowed before. Why is it allowed now is a question for FIA, since no other team is doing it obviously no team got the memo.
Sorry, was just a joke, not about youCouncilorIrissa wrote:I've never called them aimless.dialtone wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 14:36Totally aimless team behavior right there.CouncilorIrissa wrote:Formu1a.uno reports that the FW update has been brought forward to Singapore.
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At those speeds, it could be up to 5kmh more and judging by top speed data and DRS delta it's definitely at least 3-4kmh. More than enough to be critical for overtaking. Ferrari lost because they stayed 2 laps too long on mediums and because they stayed on typical Hard tyre warm up cycle instead of picking up the pace, but having been overtaken already it didn't help to fight a car that sheds considerably more drag than others on straights
Maybe, it could be, doubt we will ever get a number out of McLaren. I respect your opinion more than mine in the matter though.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 14:57At those speeds, it could be up to 5kmh more and judging by top speed data and DRS delta it's definitely at least 3-4kmh. More than enough to be critical for overtaking. Ferrari lost because they stayed 2 laps too long on mediums and because they stayed on typical Hard tyre warm up cycle instead of picking up the pace, but having been overtaken already it didn't help to fight a car that sheds considerably more drag than others on straights
Yep 2,3,4 km/h is an important advantage when the cars are so close. It could be the difference between an overtake or staying behind.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 14:57At those speeds, it could be up to 5kmh more and judging by top speed data and DRS delta it's definitely at least 3-4kmh. More than enough to be critical for overtaking. Ferrari lost because they stayed 2 laps too long on mediums and because they stayed on typical Hard tyre warm up cycle instead of picking up the pace, but having been overtaken already it didn't help to fight a car that sheds considerably more drag than others on straights
Ferrari has been really impressive with the upgrades this season. Unfortunate that they hit that misstep with the Barcelona floor, but they recovered really quickly and now are pushing even further beyond. One can safely assume they now have a better grasp on what to avoid in this regulation set so any upgrades that come in the future should bring the desired results from the get-go.Xyz22 wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 15:08Yep 2,3,4 km/h is an important advantage when the cars are so close. It could be the difference between an overtake or staying behind.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 14:57At those speeds, it could be up to 5kmh more and judging by top speed data and DRS delta it's definitely at least 3-4kmh. More than enough to be critical for overtaking. Ferrari lost because they stayed 2 laps too long on mediums and because they stayed on typical Hard tyre warm up cycle instead of picking up the pace, but having been overtaken already it didn't help to fight a car that sheds considerably more drag than others on straights
Kudos to McLaren that has been able to "exploit" the rules in a very smart way.
In any event, according to Formu1a.uno the new front wing will be available in Singapore already
https://x.com/GiulyDuchessa/status/1836018520611516772
As i said a fully reworked FW could be a significant improvement, providing it works correctly I'm not expecting the SF 24 to compete with the McL in medium/long radius corners, but maybe it could in reducing the understeer in low speed that has been quite the issue for Leclerc this season.
Sorry for asking, but why lost?Vanja #66 wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 14:41They are truly and utterly lostdialtone wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 14:36Totally aimless team behavior right there.CouncilorIrissa wrote:Formu1a.uno reports that the FW update has been brought forward to Singapore.
https://formu1a-uno.translate.goog/it/f ... r_pto=wapp
It's a sarcastic reply, because after the Barcelona update everyone called Ferrari an ambitionless team with no plan forward
If they got eg +3kmh from it, it puts them equal to Ferrari and 1-2kmh down on Red Bull (with new floor that's less loaded in diffuser, so carrying less drag than ever this season) in Baku and typically on every track so far they were just about equal to those two teams or 1-2kmh lower (could also be Merc PU lacking 5-10HP, not just aero).Emag wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 15:06Maybe, it could be, doubt we will ever get a number out of McLaren. I respect your opinion more than mine in the matter though.
I wouldn't expect it to be worth up to 5, but I also wouldn't be surprised if it is in the realm of 1-4 depending on what the wind is doing too.
That's just based on the fact that they did indeed bring a low DF package. Even the lower plane, when you account for the curvature, there's less surface area on the wing that's hitting the air. If you look at the cars on track, McLaren's rear wing visually seemed the lesser loaded and its somewhat confirmed by both McLaren, mentioning it after friday that they decided to go with low load, as well as opponent teams (Leclerc saying the same).
Also, if we assume it's worth up to 5 and we remove that from the top speeds in the race, then that brings McLaren ~2-4 kmh down on Ferrari/RedBull whilst running with a lower DF package. Is their efficiency really that atrocious? Again, could be, but I somehow doubt it's that bad.
When they brought this wing at Spa it was deemed a bit too low for that track though, but the beam wings are drastically different and they have a huge impact on drag/downforce. I think the wing in itself is not super high downforce, but the overall DF/drag level at the rear is quite variable depending on what beam wing is used.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 16:47If they got eg +3kmh from it, it puts them equal to Ferrari and 1-2kmh down on Red Bull (with new floor that's less loaded in diffuser, so carrying less drag than ever this season) in Baku and typically on every track so far they were just about equal to those two teams or 1-2kmh lower (could also be Merc PU lacking 5-10HP, not just aero).Emag wrote: ↑17 Sep 2024, 15:06Maybe, it could be, doubt we will ever get a number out of McLaren. I respect your opinion more than mine in the matter though.
I wouldn't expect it to be worth up to 5, but I also wouldn't be surprised if it is in the realm of 1-4 depending on what the wind is doing too.
That's just based on the fact that they did indeed bring a low DF package. Even the lower plane, when you account for the curvature, there's less surface area on the wing that's hitting the air. If you look at the cars on track, McLaren's rear wing visually seemed the lesser loaded and its somewhat confirmed by both McLaren, mentioning it after friday that they decided to go with low load, as well as opponent teams (Leclerc saying the same).
Also, if we assume it's worth up to 5 and we remove that from the top speeds in the race, then that brings McLaren ~2-4 kmh down on Ferrari/RedBull whilst running with a lower DF package. Is their efficiency really that atrocious? Again, could be, but I somehow doubt it's that bad.
There's absolutely no way they could have used that wing in Monza with so much success if it didn't shed 3-4kmh on those long straights, even the mighty RB19 had to clip its smallest wing to be able to come close to Ferrari on straights last year