RBR dont seem to bother with the Y250 vortex off of the flap tips like most of other teamsMorteza wrote: ↑07 Jul 2020, 15:31Comparison of new and old nose (via F1i.com)
https://i.imgur.com/P2EUuod.jpg
Motorsport-total (I think, or was it AMuS) reported that Red Bull found an issue with the floor edges which were (if I understood correctly) too bendy under airflow when the wheels were steered in very much, ie. in tight corners - and they hope to have some first bits to fix that for the coming weekend (making it more rigid?). They were quoting the team as that being cause of Verstappen spin (and presumably those in pre-season testing as well), giving them an extra 0.3s when that problem is fully solved.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑09 Jul 2020, 04:45Car looks twichy mid corner in Q mode. Likely setup for race not translatable to Q. Mercedes look dead stable. More versatile.
Yeah, very Mercedes but bulked up outside to have those air-channels fit I guess. And that might also be why they don't use those indentations, as they already have airflow going through rather than around. Or it could be an intermediate step in changing the aero system.
Not sure why he is getting minus points this time. Even a broken clock is right twice a day. I also think now the low-rake concept is superior, especially with the constant rules changes that hurt high rake cars way more than low-rake cars. Problem only is that everything is homologated now.McMika98 wrote: ↑09 Jul 2020, 07:06Never understood why they cant move away from the high rake concept, Merc have been producing the highest of downforce levels for the last 5 years with a low rake. Car becomes much more stable and less peaky. This year the car is even worse, I don't think it will do well in changeable and windy conditions which was an achilles heel last year. The mclarens are a surprise now within touching distance despite significantly lower downforce.
James key is missed by Toro Rosso. He produced cars that were faster than Adrian's at the start of the year only to be outdeveloped. 2022 isn't looking great if they don't change the philosophy.
I didn't vote, but I'll tell you much of what he wrote is factually incorrect.Pyrone89 wrote: ↑09 Jul 2020, 17:22Not sure why he is getting minus points this time. Even a broken clock is right twice a day. I also think now the low-rake concept is superior, especially with the constant rules changes that hurt high rake cars way more than low-rake cars. Problem only is that everything is homologated now.McMika98 wrote: ↑09 Jul 2020, 07:06Never understood why they cant move away from the high rake concept, Merc have been producing the highest of downforce levels for the last 5 years with a low rake. Car becomes much more stable and less peaky. This year the car is even worse, I don't think it will do well in changeable and windy conditions which was an achilles heel last year. The mclarens are a surprise now within touching distance despite significantly lower downforce.
James key is missed by Toro Rosso. He produced cars that were faster than Adrian's at the start of the year only to be outdeveloped. 2022 isn't looking great if they don't change the philosophy.
Merc always had multi wing elements loaded to max downforce levels. I am saying that they were able to generate as much if not more downforce without the rake. Merc always struggled in slow corners as they had longer wheelbase and car was not as nimble. That is now a thing of past with their clever steering column. The longer floor with low rake will generate as much downforce which is consistent.ME4ME wrote: ↑09 Jul 2020, 17:39
-Yes Mercedes has been good but they haven't always had the most downforce over the last 5 years. Red Bull has beaten them in that area plenty of times. Winning at typical venue's where ultimate downforce makes the difference (Monaco, Mexico etc)
- Mclaren also run plenty of rake.
- Toro Rosso was competitve against Red Bull early in the season just once.
Mercedes was a beast in slow corners last year without their clever steering column.