if u expo it on formula style, that means you need 2 more stronger structure to located them & more weight
With the "footbox" area of the chassis moved forward as shown, and the suspension attached to this I don't think you'll need any additional structure....
they said that there are nearly no stress on the chassis during turning. that means if you make it to normal, we all know is normal car got that and you will need a stronger chassis to support the extra load & gian more weight.
I can see that the repositioning of the weight (and downforce centre of pressure) nearer the rear wheels would mean that for a given chassis bending moment the weight of the chassis would come down (simplistically thinking of the chassis as a beam, since the loads on the deltawing would be nearer the supports (wheels) rather than acting in the middle of the "beam" as with a conventional car). However, the difference in weight distribution isn't actually that much (rear weight bias of 72% on the Deltawing vs 60% on a conventional car... so 12% difference).... But lets say for argument the chassis on the Deltawing could be 20% lighter...
The Aluminium Chassis on an Elise weighs 65kg... the carbon monocoque on an F1 car (designed for very high downforce loads) weighs approx 35kg... (The bare chassis of a Caterham 7 is <20kg). For argument's sake lets say the chassis on our Deltawing is carbon composite and weighs something like 50kg. 20% weigh reduction from 50kg is 10kg. So lets add that to the Conventional car we've built from our original Deltawing... so now we're up to 474kg (or 5.3% higher than Deltawing).
also, when the wheel is far away frony the chassic, u'll need 2 rods to connected the wheel & damper
I had assumed 5 lengths of steel tubing (2 per wishbone and a spring/damper push rod) per wheel, each 500mm long and 25mm diameter, 3mm wall thickness resulting in a weight of 4kg per wheel increase to space the wheels outwards as shown. So an increase of 8kg total for the two wheels.
your design is more suitable on a Deltawing concept road car
There is no "Delta" shape in the conventional design shown so I would drop the "Deltawing" tag altogether
---more drag& weight
Slightly more, as discussed, But better cornering dynamics. Without wanting to sound like a broken record... Even if you don't believe my calculations and diagrams in preceeding posts showing the fundamental effects at play, history has shown that a delta layout with a very high rearward weight bias is good for straight line events such as dragsters and top speed records, but the rectangular layout has better cornering dynamics and results in a faster race car around a circuit with corners,
despite the drag and weight penalties. Naturally there will be a switch point where the circuit in question favours one design or the other... is Le Mans "straight enough" to favour the Delta Design? That's the question....
but easier to drive(specially park in car park)
Eh? Why?
more comfortable
,
Again, why?