I wouldn't expect the DRL to look the same but maybe the other components will be carry over. I suppose we'll see when they eventually style themdjos wrote:I think that's a pretty safe bet.RegerandeBull wrote:Maybe we'll get some special LMP1 spec headlights but I bet it'll probably end up looking like thisdjos wrote:
True, some nice laser headlights would be cool!
https://cdn0.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/zOXvZj ... T_42.0.jpg
So the car is only going to have it's first run at the end of next year.....2017. With Deliveries almost 2 years later....hmmmmThe design is now fixed bar a few details and it is due to run, according to Dave King, Aston’s vice-president and special operations manager, who is charged with building it, at the end of next year, with the first customer deliveries in 2019.
FoxHound wrote:So the car is only going to have it's first run at the end of next year.....2017. With Deliveries almost 2 years later....hmmmmThe design is now fixed bar a few details and it is due to run, according to Dave King, Aston’s vice-president and special operations manager, who is charged with building it, at the end of next year, with the first customer deliveries in 2019.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/cars/news/as ... -the-hype/
Where SR71 at?
Makes sense. Do you have a source?gandharva wrote:The program with AM is running for 18 month now, according to Horner.SR71 wrote:My guess, like others have said, is that this program is roughtly 1-1.5 years old. We had a hint at the program when the AM/RB rumors started last year in Monza I believe.
To me, that statement doesn't really compute. "The design is now fixed bar a few details," but only due to run at the end of next year?FoxHound wrote:So the car is only going to have it's first run at the end of next year.....2017. With Deliveries almost 2 years later....hmmmmThe design is now fixed bar a few details and it is due to run, according to Dave King, Aston’s vice-president and special operations manager, who is charged with building it, at the end of next year, with the first customer deliveries in 2019.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/cars/news/as ... -the-hype/
Where SR71 at?
From FoxHound's article, just above:SR71 wrote:Makes sense. Do you have a source?gandharva wrote:The program with AM is running for 18 month now, according to Horner.SR71 wrote:My guess, like others have said, is that this program is roughtly 1-1.5 years old. We had a hint at the program when the AM/RB rumors started last year in Monza I believe.
Thanks,
SR71
It was a January evening in 2015 when the men behind Aston Martin's first ever mid-engined road car, the AM-RB 001, met in a gastropub and turned a pipe dream into a real-life project unveiled this week.
"It was over sausage and mash," says Aston Martin boss Andy Palmer. "Up to then it had been a collection of ideas and thoughts."
You going to hold me on a technicality, when the car is going to run until late 2017 at the earliest?SR71 wrote: but let's cut to the chase. You think the program started in mid-March 2016, because that's when the press release happened. Confirm or deny?
You're probably the first one to call that front wing "small".SR71 wrote:DiogoBrand wrote:I'm not sure how the FW14 handled bumps, and I guess none of us know how it would handle a public road, but it was able to keep the car at the exact same height despite road irregularities and weight transfer, and more than 20 years has past since then.SectorOne wrote:
Electronic suspension like the Williams F14 maybe?
McLaren(maybe others as well, but I don't know about them) makes road cars without physical anti-roll bars just by using clever suspension.
So I'm guessing this car will have some state-of-the-art suspension that's able to handle a public road and keep the car at the optimal heights at all times, not to mention featuring several modes.
And for the people that at the beggining of the thread disagreed with me, saying that active suspension wouldn't be a big part of the car, and that it wouldn't have wings, I guess you were wrong. And for the people that said it would feature a big fan at the back... really?!
The wings are pretty minuscule, I think flow conditioners for the "main wing" ( the underbody ) is a more appropriate term...
But yes, it does have some small wings.
Sure.SR71 wrote:Makes sense. Do you have a source?
http://www.motorsport-total.com/f1/news ... 70602.html"Wir arbeiten jetzt seit 18 Monaten mit Aston Martin zusammen, und der RB12 ist das erste Auto, das im Zeitraum dieser Arbeitsweise entstanden ist. Und es handelt sich offensichtlich um eine ziemlich erfolgreiches Auto."
Didn't they just say 5.2 L, NA, but somehow nothing related to their current 5.2 L?turbof1 wrote:Can we please move on from when the project started or not? Whether or not this proves it's nothing more then a concept is kind of ramming the topic in the wall. Yes, they surely will not have showed everything, and at the same time the 'concept' showed more then enough to have an idea what they are aiming for.
Maybe we can focus on what is being shown and what they are possibly not showing? Like...
So given the size of the car, what kind of V12 would be put into it? Aston Martin has used V12's before, for instance the AM V12 Zagato. That thing put out around 510bhp. Use of more exotic materials could pump up the number though.