It seems that they are trying to measure the height (i guess those are height sensors) to try to figure out what's wrong with the FW and front suspension.
It seems that they are trying to measure the height (i guess those are height sensors) to try to figure out what's wrong with the FW and front suspension.
If a possible stall of the front wing was the main issue Ferrari had, they would have not kept on saying that they don’t really understand what the problem is.
That's not a wise assumption. Changing the rake angle might fix the FW (if that's the issue), only to cause a different issue with the floor, or diffuser.
First
Many of use on the forum are aware of this simple fact.
Nobody say the oppositedans79 wrote: ↑16 May 2019, 22:08Many of use on the forum are aware of this simple fact.
Every teams design philosophy has an upper limit. If All they had to do was increase rake, they would have done that already. Since they haven't and have openly admired they still aren't sure what the issue is, it's safe to assume that the fix will be a lot more complex.
I disagree, I would say its probably 70-80% aero, and the rest suspension. If it was purely or predominantly suspension, they would have fixed it by now.
Unless it involves coarse geometry. Moving attachment points and resizing large components will incur monocoque or gearbox changes. Otherwise I agree. This is still an aero formula. It's why Red Bull have remained competitive despite their power units. If something's wrong with a car, there's a good chance it's the aero.
At low speed the behaviour is dominated by suspensions.... Red bull has indeed good aero and always had the best suspensionroon wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 04:07Unless it involves coarse geometry. Moving attachment points and resizing large components will incur monocoque or gearbox changes. Otherwise I agree. This is still an aero formula. It's why Red Bull have remained competitive despite their power units. If something's wrong with a car, there's a good chance it's the aero.
OK, that's the general opinion.mmred wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 15:27At low speed the behaviour is dominated by suspensions.... Red bull has indeed good aero and always had the best suspensionroon wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 04:07Unless it involves coarse geometry. Moving attachment points and resizing large components will incur monocoque or gearbox changes. Otherwise I agree. This is still an aero formula. It's why Red Bull have remained competitive despite their power units. If something's wrong with a car, there's a good chance it's the aero.
So do you plan to continue ignoring Binotto's own comments?mmred wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 15:27At low speed the behaviour is dominated by suspensions.... Red bull has indeed good aero and always had the best suspensionroon wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 04:07Unless it involves coarse geometry. Moving attachment points and resizing large components will incur monocoque or gearbox changes. Otherwise I agree. This is still an aero formula. It's why Red Bull have remained competitive despite their power units. If something's wrong with a car, there's a good chance it's the aero.
If they are having balance issues in all corners, that's not suspension, that's an aero issue with some potential suspension related entanglements.“Right now we are losing a lot in each corner, not only in the last sector. Each single corner we are slow with quite a lot of understeer. That is not only downforce; we have seen something in the data which we need to analyze and understand so I think an early conclusion would be a wrong conclusion. We need a fix on this, but we need a proper analysis and try to understand the matter of balance, the matter of downforce and maybe even tire concepts.”
there arent fast corners in spain, thats where aero is tested at its max and they didnt test aero but ride height with those sensors, that speaks a lot, suspensions can cause indeed an aero problem if the ride height of the fw is too much compared to the competition, i still see no stall, primary cause suspensiondans79 wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 16:38So do you plan to continue ignoring Binotto's own comments?mmred wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 15:27At low speed the behaviour is dominated by suspensions.... Red bull has indeed good aero and always had the best suspensionroon wrote: ↑17 May 2019, 04:07
Unless it involves coarse geometry. Moving attachment points and resizing large components will incur monocoque or gearbox changes. Otherwise I agree. This is still an aero formula. It's why Red Bull have remained competitive despite their power units. If something's wrong with a car, there's a good chance it's the aero.
https://racer.com/2019/05/15/binotto-sa ... eaknesses/If they are having balance issues in all corners, that's not suspension, that's an aero issue with some potential suspension related entanglements.“Right now we are losing a lot in each corner, not only in the last sector. Each single corner we are slow with quite a lot of understeer. That is not only downforce; we have seen something in the data which we need to analyze and understand so I think an early conclusion would be a wrong conclusion. We need a fix on this, but we need a proper analysis and try to understand the matter of balance, the matter of downforce and maybe even tire concepts.”