dren wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 15:59For it to be passive, and pass in this forum, it'd have to somehow include Hg.turbof1 wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 15:54That would indeed be theoritically possible, as are all passive system really, but difficult to have it work at the appropiate time.hamilton#1 wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 15:50I'm definitely not an expert, but is it possible for it to be a passive system? The tires want to stay in a straight line, because it has less resistance. So when entering the straight, the toe becomes 0 degrees and the steering wheel is pushed back. When approaching the corner the steering column moves back to its original place because of the forces due to braking.
I sounds a bit farfetched and this would also mean that the steering column is moving al the time. Even mid corners and I think that would mean that the are not able to fully control it and therefore control their balance.
Please don't judge me on this idea. I'm just a Formula 1 fan trying to maybe add some thoughts.
In reality I don't think it is feasible. They couldn't get a passive DRS working properly or make it worth it, and this sounds massively more complex to pull off.
Safety grounds?jetho wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 15:58The point is:geraldix wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 15:30I can't understand all this fuss about DAS legality...
It's pretty OBVIOUS Mercedes that has just spent a bunch of months, human resources and millions of dollars developing, building and testing a system that's completely ILLEGAL. Maybe for fun, maybe because they are just ignorant. After all, what do they know about building an F1 car? /sIs it illegal because the steering isn't allowed to change the toe angle? Maybe, maybe not...
Is it illegal beacue it can be argued to be a moveable aerodynamic device? Maybe, maybe not...
Is it illegal because it will also effect the ride hight? Maybe maybe not...
There are a lot of arguments to be made for and againt ist. Just because Mercedes thinks it's legal and spent a lot of money on it doesn't mean it actually is.
Even Mercedes saying they have 'cleared' it with the FIA doesn't mean anything. What they have most likely done is asked the FIA during the summer wether their idea is legal and the FIA has given an opinion about it.
An idea and a final implementation are two very different things.
An opinion and a verdict are two very different things.
Also, afaik the FIA can give opinions, write the rules and technical derectives, but only the stewards at a race can declare the legality of something.
One and Only wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 16:23Safety grounds?
What if system fails during the race? Will it be fail-safe? Even if it is deemed legal if it fails during the race rivals could protest result if car is not safe to drive with DAS system failure.
Legal or not, this system took pre-season testing to a whole new level of interesting
If the system fails you have either a normal can on the straights or heavy understeering can in the corners. Nothing unsafe.One and Only wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 16:23Safety grounds?jetho wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 15:58The point is:geraldix wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 15:30I can't understand all this fuss about DAS legality...
It's pretty OBVIOUS Mercedes that has just spent a bunch of months, human resources and millions of dollars developing, building and testing a system that's completely ILLEGAL. Maybe for fun, maybe because they are just ignorant. After all, what do they know about building an F1 car? /sIs it illegal because the steering isn't allowed to change the toe angle? Maybe, maybe not...
Is it illegal beacue it can be argued to be a moveable aerodynamic device? Maybe, maybe not...
Is it illegal because it will also effect the ride hight? Maybe maybe not...
There are a lot of arguments to be made for and againt ist. Just because Mercedes thinks it's legal and spent a lot of money on it doesn't mean it actually is.
Even Mercedes saying they have 'cleared' it with the FIA doesn't mean anything. What they have most likely done is asked the FIA during the summer wether their idea is legal and the FIA has given an opinion about it.
An idea and a final implementation are two very different things.
An opinion and a verdict are two very different things.
Also, afaik the FIA can give opinions, write the rules and technical derectives, but only the stewards at a race can declare the legality of something.
What if system fails during the race? Will it be fail-safe? Even if it is deemed legal if it fails during the race rivals could protest result if car is not safe to drive with DAS system failure.
Legal or not, this system took pre-season testing to a whole new level of interesting
You missed my point by huge margin. I was completing list in which ways it can be protested. I have no idea is it legal or not, or will it be protested in any way or not. Most rival teams at this point have no clear idea if it is legal or not either.Diesel wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 16:26One and Only wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 16:23Safety grounds?
What if system fails during the race? Will it be fail-safe? Even if it is deemed legal if it fails during the race rivals could protest result if car is not safe to drive with DAS system failure.
Legal or not, this system took pre-season testing to a whole new level of interesting
What if steering fails in the race? Will it be fail-safe? Easy solution, ban steering.
What if brakes fail in the race? Will they be fail-safe? Easy solution, ban brakes.
What if tyres fail in the race? Will they be fail-safe? Easy solution, ban tyres.
Also since a road car runs a lot less negative camber, the contact patch of a street tire should be much bigger, thus generating more rolling resistance, correct?supermarine wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 16:46Interesting old paper (1978!) on the effect of toe, or 'slip angle' on rolling resistance.
https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyNET.exe/910 ... &ZyEntry=4
So there is potentially quite a bit of gain for rolling resistance with no toe out. Although I imagine rolling resistance is very small compared to aero drag for an f1 car on the straight.
I suspect this whole Merc steering trick may be more about tyre management than top speed though.