Again my question:
Does somebody knows, where the electronic box is placed? I think it should be in the cockpit, but i don't know.
This is the device:
http://www.mclarenelectronics.com/Produ ... G-310B.asp
Most other teams mount it in the sidepod fed by cooling air from the main radiator duct. I've not checked the RB6 but most teams have it in the righthand sidepod.PaulB wrote:Again my question:
Does somebody knows, where the electronic box is placed? I think it should be in the cockpit, but i don't know.
This is the device:
http://www.mclarenelectronics.com/Produ ... G-310B.asp
scarbs wrote:Most other teams mount it in the sidepod fed by cooling air from the main radiator duct. I've not checked the RB6 but most teams have it in the righthand sidepod.PaulB wrote:Again my question:
Does somebody knows, where the electronic box is placed? I think it should be in the cockpit, but i don't know.
This is the device:
http://www.mclarenelectronics.com/Produ ... G-310B.asp
NB: McLarens SECU is mounted down low in the middle of the monocoque. It basically sits down below the drivers thighs\knees in the pointed section of chassis that forms the top of the splitter. Historically McLaren were the only team to position it there, which is why the SECU gets its unique triangular shape. When MES supplied the entire gridit kept its shape.
Pic from my KERS analysis shows the secu (grey)
http://scarbsf1.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/kers.jpg
Tony Dodgins (Autosport Plus) wrote:As much as I think Webber has done a superb job this year, love what the bloke stands for and would dearly love to see him win this year's championship, Vettel is a good guy too and you can't be other than impressed by his current form under pressure.
For the second successive race there was just seven hundredths of a second between the pair in Korean qualifying, which equates to around four metres, or less than the length of a Red Bull RB6 if you prefer.
Every time that happens I feel frustrated on Webber's behalf because, probably, he's done the better job. Why? Because when you're 6ft2ins and at least 10 kilos heavier than the little guy in the other car no matter how drawn your face looks, you can't play with the ballast and optimise set-up as much as he can. It's fractions, but that's all we're talking about.
You can't saw your legs off and the problem is never going to go away but to consistently get that close to someone as quick as Vettel and often beat him, is a damned good effort. Compounding the problem, every time it happens you get lumbered with the dirty side of the grid and are often disadvantaged against the guy starting behind you, which is a rude slap in the face when these cars are as hard to pass as they are.
Read the full article on BBC SportMark Hughes (BBC Sport) wrote:At this part of the season, Webber was genuinely able to get more from the car's exhaust-blown diffuser.
In its initial form, this component required a very specific driving technique to maximise the time on open throttle - which increased the downforce boost from the exhaust plume - and Webber was superb at it, consistently squeezing just that little bit more from it than his team-mate.
Vettel continued to be better at living with a little bit of entry oversteer, and that ability to adapt to the car moving around him was maybe partly why he was not as insistent on adapting his technique to a feature that calmed the rear end as soon as you got on the throttle.
From Valencia onwards however, the Renault engine was running software that retarded the ignition off-throttle, using the extra heat created to maintain exhaust flow to the diffuser even off-throttle.
Suddenly that downforce boost was there even during braking and Webber's specialised technique was no longer required. That improvement, in other words, took away a key Webber advantage.
Impossible to tell. With such a failure the whole thing is going to be one thick soup.timbo wrote:When Vettel's engine died, what was that mercury like stuff that seemed to be leaking? Cooling liquid?
I wondered about that. Whatever it was, it looked to be white hot.segedunum wrote:Impossible to tell. With such a failure the whole thing is going to be one thick soup.timbo wrote:When Vettel's engine died, what was that mercury like stuff that seemed to be leaking? Cooling liquid?
Senna, if I remember correctly, used to go on and off the throttle all the time - I would think he would have thought it was utter crapsegedunum wrote:I can buy that theory to be honest. Webber has long been quite aggressive on the throttle in corners. Initially the car would have been better suited to a driver who could keep his foot in the throttle around corners but that advantage would obviously be lessened with the addition of off-throttle ignition. Goodness knows what a driver like Senna would have made of it.......