So here’s the direct comparison with DRS for both:
Edit: the way the Ferrari goes first back and then forward when the DRS closes speaks to just very softly sprung suspension to my eyes.
Very interesting indeed. I wonder how it's tuned?MartijnA3 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 12:39The gif was very interesting, I've merged two frames into one.
https://i.imgur.com/R6Xalyn.png
me too think that there is no particular magic going on: simply ferrari has quite soft suspension settings. The remarkable thing is that they managed such settings to work well with the other aspects of car dynamics during the whole lap
Nice comparison. The SF16-H already had this kind of RW flex under high speed load:
Not sure if it's just rear wing flex with the SF90, I think the entire rear comes up.Godius wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 16:00
Nice comparison. The SF16-H already had this kind of RW flex under high speed load:
http://i.imgur.com/k3F89H8.gifv
I remember reading something a year or two ago that a team was working on a suspension trick that allowed them to run the car lower, possibly with more rake too (e.g. lower at the front) because during the times at which the car would normally 'dive' and the plank would hit the ground they managed to raise the car up. This is my understanding in layman's terms. Am I right in thinking normally a car would drop at the front under heavy braking and therefore if they're able to raise the back of the car (lifting the front) along the straight they would get a reduction in drag for better straight line speed plus less of a 'dive' when they brake meaning they could run a lower ride height? Or am I getting this mixed up with something else.David1976 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 15:31Very interesting indeed. I wonder how it's tuned?MartijnA3 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 12:39The gif was very interesting, I've merged two frames into one.
https://i.imgur.com/R6Xalyn.png
That looks like the suspension sits down at the rear as speed, and downforce, increases. That it "unloads" in a single "jump" might get them looked at by other teams. A protest on the basis that the suspension steps between two positions would be on the grounds that is doing so solely for aerodynamic reasons and so is illegal. If the rear sits in a single step and then lifts back up in a single step (as it appears to do in that gif) rather than doing both gradually and proportionately to the applied downforce, then they will get told to remove it.
I believe it's perspective. The further back, the stronger the effect with area around the driver being the pivoting point.Bandit1216 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 17:09Very strange this.
At the camera, it looks like it's 10 mm, jet at the wing it seems to be 50mm. Is it wing flex? Would that be against the rules as no aero part is supposed to move.
Another sequenceJust_a_fan wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 17:20That looks like the suspension sits down at the rear as speed, and downforce, increases. That it "unloads" in a single "jump" might get them looked at by other teams. A protest on the basis that the suspension steps between two positions would be on the grounds that is doing so solely for aerodynamic reasons and so is illegal. If the rear sits in a single step and then lifts back up in a single step (as it appears to do in that gif) rather than doing both gradually and proportionately to the applied downforce, then they will get told to remove it.
I don't think so; the t wing hops up too, and that sits on the shark fin. So it's the entire rear end that's "happy to see you".
What's so strange about that? Leclerc closes his DRS, but doesn't brake yet, meaning the airflow towards the RW makes the car lean back and at the point he starts braking it leans forward. Isn't that logical and can simply be explained by soft springs?Cedo wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 18:59Another sequenceJust_a_fan wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 17:20That looks like the suspension sits down at the rear as speed, and downforce, increases. That it "unloads" in a single "jump" might get them looked at by other teams. A protest on the basis that the suspension steps between two positions would be on the grounds that is doing so solely for aerodynamic reasons and so is illegal. If the rear sits in a single step and then lifts back up in a single step (as it appears to do in that gif) rather than doing both gradually and proportionately to the applied downforce, then they will get told to remove it.
https://imgur.com/gallery/kVpeiOP