Especially in FE, where if you tried to climb out yourself, while the car is upsidown, you might get a fatal shock (touching the ground and car), halo or no halo. Stay put and don't touch anything until the guys with the rubber gloves and hooks get there....roon wrote: ↑31 Jan 2018, 01:25What's interesting to me here is that when you drop the rabid pursuit of aero, CoG, and vehicle weight, via the formula, there is freedom to develop aesthetics. This is the 3D equivalent of livery.
Think of the fun other series get to have in this regard, Tifosi lights and all:
http://www.dailysportscar.com/wp-conten ... ace-15.jpg
FIA policy is to revert upended cars. Then extract the driver. There was a press conference about the halo a while back, wherein FIA officials expressed this.chapmanlung wrote: ↑31 Jan 2018, 01:17...I do have a concern about the cockpit exit. For a driver getting out (regardless of the situation) they first have to climb out through the halo and then climb into the car. there seems to be a reasonable bit of bodywork in between the cockpit and the driver touching the ground.
In a stationary state, it would be easy for the driver to get in and out. but in an emergency like a crash, would it be dangerous for drivers to get out without the risk of stumbling?
That's not how electricity works. There's no voltage between the earth and the battery.
Duh....
You still don't get it. It wouldn't be attracted to the earth. Nothing would happen.
in F1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=__DpDTDyc4gmzso wrote: ↑31 Jan 2018, 16:08You still don't get it. It wouldn't be attracted to the earth. Nothing would happen.
Also the battery cells themselves have tiny voltage and the power electronics would shut down in a crash.
Furthermore. carbon fibre composites (which all the structural parts are mad of) don't conduct electricity, so the car couldn't become "live" even if you connected it to mains voltage.
You'd need to touch both poles of the power electronics' output simultaneously while it is on. There's no possibility of that happening.
Your boy is not the only one excited by the look of the new FE cars!bonjon1979 wrote: ↑31 Jan 2018, 16:19Say what you like about the quality of the racing etc, Formula E are definitely doing a good marketing the brand. The 2018 car definitely got my 10 year old boy excited with F1 cars looking decidedly 'meh' by comparision.
I don't speak italian, but a commenter says it was an electrostatic shock.
I have my doubts. Wouldn't be the first pointless safety measure for something that has an astronomically low chance of happening.
What?????mzso wrote: ↑31 Jan 2018, 16:08You still don't get it. It wouldn't be attracted to the earth. Nothing would happen.
Also the battery cells themselves have tiny voltage and the power electronics would shut down in a crash.
Furthermore. carbon fibre composites (which all the structural parts are mad of) don't conduct electricity, so the car couldn't become "live" even if you connected it to mains voltage.
You'd need to touch both poles of the power electronics' output simultaneously while it is on. There's no possibility of that happening.
So most people ask for ground effects in F1 instead of wings causing dirty air, and when FE adopt that route, most people does criticize itFW17 wrote: ↑30 Jan 2018, 16:25OMG the rear is so UGLY
http://a1.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=%2 ... quality=40
http://a1.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=%2 ... quality=40
agreed.Andres125sx wrote: ↑31 Jan 2018, 18:48So most people ask for ground effects in F1 instead of wings causing dirty air, and when FE adopt that route, most people does criticize itFW17 wrote: ↑30 Jan 2018, 16:25OMG the rear is so UGLY
http://a1.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=%2 ... quality=40
http://a1.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=%2 ... quality=40
IMHO this car looks like the start of a revolution I´ve been waiting for years. I think wings are outdated. Nowadays engineers can create more than enough DF without using wings wich produce turbulence, dirty air, aero problems to the chasing car, and harm wheel to wheel racing.
Maybe not the most developed concept but it´s just a start for a spec series, I can´t wait to see how this will evolve
I take it you are not a fan of NASCAR, Baja, rally, Indy, touring cars, GT classes, hillclimb, time attack, Super GT, Superbikes, drag racing, tractor pull, dirt track, drifting, DTM, or most everything pre-aero era. This may leave you with open-wheel classes, but they are largely styled by regulations. One may say, "That's not styling, it's sober decision making." The engineering exec and the regulator may be thought of as impartial evaluators of pure data, making no arbitrary decisions, yet we see a field full of geometrically distinct bodywork in F1. Too distinct, often, as the free development areas on the cars are few and often limited. Each pursues their own preferences and best guesses toward what they think will create the best finished product. Artists (maybe not the post-modern types) approach their work in the same way.Tim.Wright wrote: ↑31 Jan 2018, 08:57There's something about styled surfaces on racars that makes me vomit a bit in my mouth.
I provisionally redact my support for in-HX-duct Christmas lights.
Andres125sx wrote: ↑31 Jan 2018, 18:48
So most people ask for ground effects in F1 instead of wings causing dirty air, and when FE adopt that route, most people does criticize it
IMHO this car looks like the start of a revolution I´ve been waiting for years. I think wings are outdated. Nowadays engineers can create more than enough DF without using wings wich produce turbulence, dirty air, aero problems to the chasing car, and harm wheel to wheel racing.
Maybe not the most developed concept but it´s just a start for a spec series, I can´t wait to see how this will evolve
Don't understand this even though I'm not an aero expert. F1 cars in the days of flat bottoms and relatively unregulated diffusers (mid-80's to ~ 2000?) had rear diffusers that extended well behind rear wheel centerline.