Could this be in the same vein as the Mclaren 3rd peddle?
Drag the left side, it turns left. Drive the right side harder, it turns left
Could this be in the same vein as the Mclaren 3rd peddle?
Erm... that's just an article from a Journo. Are you new here? haha.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑01 Oct 2018, 18:25https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/13881 ... d-mercedesPlatinumZealot wrote: ↑01 Oct 2018, 16:30
I have my reason why I think it is designed for heating.. I am glad to be proven wrong, but lets work it out scientifically.
Whoops, completely read over 'passive' in your post . I thought you were implying more of a conspiracy.
Wtf!? A tilting gearbox? wow.
Yea its totally riciculous but Ive heard worse before. I figured if articles are going to pop up about this rear wheel steering there must be something more devious than just some simple suspension geometry tricks.garyjpaterson wrote: ↑02 Oct 2018, 13:01Wtf!? A tilting gearbox? wow.
Whats wrong with just designing in some bumpsteer? Its so simple and adjustable...
I think the article is more from a high concentration of NaCl in the authors bodyjh199 wrote: ↑02 Oct 2018, 13:24Yea its totally riciculous but Ive heard worse before. I figured if articles are going to pop up about this rear wheel steering there must be something more devious than just some simple suspension geometry tricks.garyjpaterson wrote: ↑02 Oct 2018, 13:01Wtf!? A tilting gearbox? wow.
Whats wrong with just designing in some bumpsteer? Its so simple and adjustable...
No point, you'd just make the mountings for the tie rods linked together and then make the thing compliant, you don't need anything silly like 'tilting gearboxes' or the other stuff the other author was coming up with.jh199 wrote: ↑02 Oct 2018, 00:12Anyway, the only thing I would think they could get away with is letting the front of the gearbox tilt outwards a bit mid-corner. With the suspension arms mounted on the gearbox, an outward tilt could pull the front of the rear wheel inboards. Helping the car rotate in the same why supercar rear wheel steering works. This would, I'd think, make the car incredibly unstable at the rear though as the cornering speed increases. I'm still convinced that this rumor is just hot air though. Mercedes has just been getting their setups right on an already near perfect car.
Prove it's for heating the tyres if you're so sure..PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑02 Oct 2018, 00:57Erm... that's just an article from a Journo. Are you new here? haha.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑01 Oct 2018, 18:25https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/13881 ... d-mercedesPlatinumZealot wrote: ↑01 Oct 2018, 16:30
I have my reason why I think it is designed for heating.. I am glad to be proven wrong, but lets work it out scientifically.
But seriously though, there are easier ways to cool the rim.
True, im not saying that twisting the gearbox is whats going on or even something that is feasible. I was thinking anything that would allow the forward tie rods to push and pull the tires a bit would allow rotation around a pivot in the upright. I figured that since the tie rods can be mounted on the gearbox, let the gearbox rotate a bit and allow these tie rods to be moved inboard and outboard, effectively steering the rear wheels ever so slightly.PhillipM wrote: ↑02 Oct 2018, 16:46No point, you'd just make the mountings for the tie rods linked together and then make the thing compliant, you don't need anything silly like 'tilting gearboxes' or the other stuff the other author was coming up with.jh199 wrote: ↑02 Oct 2018, 00:12Anyway, the only thing I would think they could get away with is letting the front of the gearbox tilt outwards a bit mid-corner. With the suspension arms mounted on the gearbox, an outward tilt could pull the front of the rear wheel inboards. Helping the car rotate in the same why supercar rear wheel steering works. This would, I'd think, make the car incredibly unstable at the rear though as the cornering speed increases. I'm still convinced that this rumor is just hot air though. Mercedes has just been getting their setups right on an already near perfect car.
This is something that keeps getting dredged up by clueless hack 'tech bloggers' every year - we had the exact same accusation at the beginning of the year and last year. They never seem to realise everyone is using passive rear steering.
I believe so, is that not 'steering' (assist) with the rear wheels?