Yes, that makes more sense in terms of description. But the goal is still high air flow flow in the nose section even if you want to divert it away later. I wonder how that drooping nose was supposed to achieve that. The straighter high noses seem to be a simple solution for the task.[/quote]BreezyRacer wrote:Actually you want to use high nose so the underside and splitter area divert airflow out the sides of the car to *minimize* the airflow under the car and make the diffuser create a lower pressure area under the floor.WhiteBlue wrote:I think the philosophy today is making the tub and nose as high as possible and clearing the airspace under it as much as possible. That gives you the best chance to pull as much air as possible under the car to feed to the diffusors. Of course I'm not talking about management parts as the plow or splitter that are needed, just the nose and tub.
There are two schools of thought on the nose profile. The high nose channels air below the car where it is managed by the diffuser and turning vanes. The droopy nose is designed to deflect air upwards and over the car, and to prevent air from going under the car. this is the Mercedes system. In other words, the high nose removes air from under the car and helps suck it to the track, whereas the low nose is putting emphasis on pushing the car down onto the track. It looks as if suck is better than push, at this time, but there are merits in both systems, and it is possible that when Mercedes understand their system fully, they may be able to catch up.
I imagine that testing on the nose was related only to the nose area, thus they may have found a little more front downforce with that layout and since that's what they were looking for they settled on that design.
You have to now what you want when it comes to design and testing so if you're not looking for improved airflow at the splitter/under nose area you won't find it, and thus down the wrong path we go .. it wouldn't surprise me to see them revert towards a design like last year's Brawn cow catcher splitter. It probably wasn't drag efficient but it did seem to work well with this nose design.[/quote]