Vanja actually has the (distinctively relevant) education to back for it, so I wouldn't so carelessly suggest "vague boundary conditions". We have an article from last week where we already discussed the wing:GPR -A wrote: ↑27 Feb 2019, 14:39What I find amusing, is the statements that I have highlighted. How do you define the boundary conditions for them. They are very vague and have arrived without any scientific methods to it (probably based on vague theoretical understandings), whereas it might actually be a desired thing for Mercedes! Who knows. It's not that they can't get an understanding of the flow structures, without running it on track. Now what is the limit? How do we know? The purpose of tightening the sidepod package, is to feed as much high velocity air as possible and in as much uninterrupted manner as possible to the wing. In that way, it might even be desired.turbof1 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2019, 11:49You forget this is testing. Mercedes is testing. IMO, what Vanja said is 100% right and frankly it's nothing out of the ordinary either. They are pushing the wing to its limit and try to see just with how much they can get away with. That's perfectly normal, as this wing could have been right on the edge in their simulations and now they try to verify that on track.GPR -A wrote: ↑27 Feb 2019, 07:38We have good reasons to accept your explanation, versus the conviction of those who have created this with the help of hundreds of professional folks working on multi-million (if not billion) dollar facilities. I truly believe that they have completely ignored such a critical possibility like the one you have explained. Yep.
I find it difficult to understand that, if someone like @Vanja can derive a conclusion that Mercedes have pushed the wing over the limt, killing the diffuser and floor performance AND it is bad and it can't provide mid-corner-behavior-predictability, how ignorant could Mercedes folks be, that a thing which so easy for an average normal forum member to understand, is something they haven't despite possessing multi-million resources.
It's a good thing to present the thoughts on what one sees through the car pictures and present the guess work in more humble manner, than to outrightly conclude that it is bad without having done any practical study of that guess work.
https://www.f1technical.net/development ... h-flow-viz
We concluded here even though the seperation that is definitely happening is perfectly acceptable. However, now, the flow is distinctively much more separated. This is not in an ambigious zone of "is this just below, right on or slightly over the limit". No here the separation is of that order it leads to downforce loss in all probability.
Let's not turn this into a toxic discussion about who has the right to back up his claims. I'll end it at that Vanja's original message:
is correct. There is no implication they did anything necessarily grossely wrong. Again, Mercedes is trying what the limits are on these new wings. They are clearly looking for it, else they would not have bothered with the flow viz! Just because they overstep it here, which they did factually, does not mean this was a mistake. This is very useful data for Mercedes to develop on.Mercedes have pushed their wing over the limit. And quite badly so, separation of about a third of this length (chord-wise) would be acceptable, this is not. This is also killing diffuser and floor performance, just a bit but enough. Can't imagine this wing would provide the car with required mid-corner-behavior-predictability.
Again, that's the end of the discussion regarding credentials. If anybody disagrees, then they should be specific in their counter arguments and tell us what the flow viz pattern tells otherwise. Just trying to bring doubt and discredit is not leading to a fruitful conversation.