Pierce89 wrote:SR71 wrote:
1) I think you and others have already stated these may not be final surfaces or something has been omitted for this press preview.
2) if these are final are you really saying something Newey did aero wise is unnecessary? How many championships have your F1 cars won?
Why is every single comment you make always aggressively deriding someone? Apparently unbeknownst to you, this forum is pretty full of engineers or engineering students, with a good grounding in maths and physics. You don't even seem to have a good grounding in reality, much less any engineering or technical category.
If you're going to make a post about how these surfaces don't reflect surfaces shown to customers during a private preview then don't follow it up with a post that nit-picks surfaces shown for a press release.
Also, in general, assume you know less about aero than Adrian Newey, pretty much always.
If you want a real answer:
This car is this high for a few reasons, 1) if you look at the air between the top of the wheel and the wheel arch you'd notice this gap is massive. This means the car is not set at a performance ride height, this would have been an active choice made by the team prior to press release. Why? One can only guess.
2) this car is light years beyond any road car in terms of aero. It's also pushing beyond what LMP1 and F1 are doing. This is something new. Looking at the bottom of the car and trying to judge it without extensive knowledge of how the car is working is pretty pointless.
NO LOTUS is acting like this car is set at Baja truck ride Heights. It's not.
There is at least 50-60mm of ride height to be remove just from suspension settings (which is probably fake for the moment) and at that point it's SAFE to assume the massive amount of DF created by this underbody is worth the small compromise to COG.
Development of performance vehicles is always an excersize of performance trade offs. One for another. Newey has clearly chosen DF over COG. What are the chances Newey has chose wrong? Remember they have unlimited simulation and testing on this car. You HONESTLY think the higher COG hasn't been considered? Its absolutely been simulated and proven to be a non issue.
In fact I'd go as far to say that we will see more HyperCars follow this higher engine placement for maximum ground effect optimization.
We're looking at the new benchmark - if they slammed the engine on the floor it would be just another boring P1/La Ferrari/koenigsegg.