viewtopic.php?f=12&t=14606&p=465254&hil ... ii#p465254
With some help of the search function...
I think it's this post by Ringo that starts it.
viewtopic.php?f=12&t=14606&p=465254&hil ... ii#p465254
They do look similar, but they are quite different, which is why I said looking closer would help.
While the longer wheelbase of the Mercedes does accentuate the perceived 'tightness' of its packaging, if we observe and compare the area from the front of the sidepod to the rear face of the engine (estimate), Mercedes wins this hands down.Maplesoup wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 14:05The mercedes will look the tightest because they run a longer car so it's almost an optical illusion. The further back they go the less they have to package into the coke bottle.
So I'd argue that red bull and Ferrari will have had a tougher time packaging the rears of their cars and as such have done just as good a job.
Yes they do look tighter but red bull and Ferrari run more rake which changes the frontal area of that area to the air. For mercedes it's pretty much front on. For the others it's like 5 to 10 degrees different.OO7 wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 15:03While the longer wheelbase of the Mercedes does accentuate the perceived 'tightness' of its packaging, if we observe and compare the area from the front of the sidepod to the rear face of the engine (estimate), Mercedes wins this hands down.Maplesoup wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 14:05The mercedes will look the tightest because they run a longer car so it's almost an optical illusion. The further back they go the less they have to package into the coke bottle.
So I'd argue that red bull and Ferrari will have had a tougher time packaging the rears of their cars and as such have done just as good a job.
Regardless of concept, engineers (aerodynamicists) aim to make the packaging as small and as tight as possible. Ideally they'd remove the side-pod altogether but that simply isn't plausible.Maplesoup wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 15:14Yes they do look tighter but red bull and Ferrari run more rake which changes the frontal area of that area to the air. For mercedes it's pretty much front on. For the others it's like 5 to 10 degrees different.
So you while they might look tighter looking at the pictures it's how the aero is going to work within their concept that will judge how well that packaging is done. Also if mercedes run into cooling issues again this year was it really worth it?
Too many unknowns to say if they've done a better job.
Can you share photos of the new PU exhaust manifold layouts?
Ferrari's design philosophy seems to be different from those of Mercedes and RBR who are clearly more similar to each other in that aspect. The engine cover of the SF1000 droops down quite aggressively. This was the case on it's predecessor already, but now they kept that and added some RBR-style shrinking to the part behind the sidepods. Not as tight as Mercedes (winner) and RBR (slightly behind the W11) in that area, but it's hard to compare them as they follow different design ideas, as told. That's my unqualified view of things.OO7 wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 15:03While the longer wheelbase of the Mercedes does accentuate the perceived 'tightness' of its packaging, if we observe and compare the area from the front of the sidepod to the rear face of the engine (estimate), Mercedes wins this hands down.Maplesoup wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 14:05The mercedes will look the tightest because they run a longer car so it's almost an optical illusion. The further back they go the less they have to package into the coke bottle.
So I'd argue that red bull and Ferrari will have had a tougher time packaging the rears of their cars and as such have done just as good a job.
As far as I'm aware, there're no photos of the current exhaust manifold layouts used by the different manufacturers. My comments were based on the 2019 designs. Judging by packaging, Mercedes and Red Bull have maintained concepts similar to 2019. Ferrari, given 2018-2019 and their current side-pod philosophy, likely haven't changed much either.
5-10 degrees? How much rake do you think the teams run?Maplesoup wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 15:14Yes they do look tighter but red bull and Ferrari run more rake which changes the frontal area of that area to the air. For mercedes it's pretty much front on. For the others it's like 5 to 10 degrees different.OO7 wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 15:03While the longer wheelbase of the Mercedes does accentuate the perceived 'tightness' of its packaging, if we observe and compare the area from the front of the sidepod to the rear face of the engine (estimate), Mercedes wins this hands down.Maplesoup wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 14:05The mercedes will look the tightest because they run a longer car so it's almost an optical illusion. The further back they go the less they have to package into the coke bottle.
So I'd argue that red bull and Ferrari will have had a tougher time packaging the rears of their cars and as such have done just as good a job.
Ferrari's design looks like that of the RB15. The RB15 I think had a more aggressive slope, but the SF1000 has better coke bottle taper (my guess being because of the exhaust manifold layout). While concept can play a part, the end result is that one team may create a car that is more tightly packaged than another, how this translates to performance is a separate issue however.LM10 wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 16:05Ferrari's design philosophy seems to be different from those of Mercedes and RBR who are clearly more similar to each other in that aspect. The engine cover of the SF1000 droops down quite aggressively. This was the case on it's predecessor already, but now they kept that and added some RBR-style shrinking to the part behind the sidepods. Not as tight as Mercedes (winner) and RBR (slightly behind the W11) in that area, but it's hard to compare them as they follow different design ideas, as told. That's my unqualified view of things.
LOL 5-10 degrees rake. Top kek.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 16:185-10 degrees? How much rake do you think the teams run?
lol yes exactly. It looks a huge difference but in numbers it isn't. Tho W11 is still low rake by comparison for sure, and it's probably a huge difference for the aero. And it's just the static angle we get, not what it's doing compressed at 300kph101FlyingDutchman wrote: ↑15 Feb 2020, 18:12More like 1.6 as the minimum and 2.1 degrees maximum. Making 0.5deg the difference lol