On the Merc they moved the position of them (in 2018), I think a few other cars as well. The RP and Merc do not sound that different. I just with they would go back to where they were before.
On the Merc they moved the position of them (in 2018), I think a few other cars as well. The RP and Merc do not sound that different. I just with they would go back to where they were before.
dans79 wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 15:13I've often wondered why they don't use something better. Jet dryers aren't exactly great for the asphalt, but something similar would do a much better job.MtthsMlw wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 14:53Track drying ongoing
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EdISHmjWkAA ... name=large
Most tracks that I've seen use brushes to remove standing water. Jet trucks to actually dry the track, which isn't needed for Formula 1.aral wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 17:03in the far distant memories that i have, i seem to recall a novel drier being used on a wet track. it was a jet engine, mounted at about an angle of 45 degrees, on the back of a truck. mind you, the truck must have had good brakes and be well loaded at the rear ! does anybody else remember where that truck appeared and where / when ?
dans79 wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 15:13I've often wondered why they don't use something better. Jet dryers aren't exactly great for the asphalt, but something similar would do a much better job.MtthsMlw wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 14:53Track drying ongoing
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EdISHmjWkAA ... name=large
Nascar has used jet driers since 76, They were basically just a small jet engine from the 50's mounted to the back of a truck or trailer. Theyr have kind of been considered a safety hazard since Montoya hit one, and set ~200 of fuel and the track on fire.aral wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 17:03in the far distant memories that i have, i seem to recall a novel drier being used on a wet track. it was a jet engine, mounted at about an angle of 45 degrees, on the back of a truck. mind you, the truck must have had good brakes and be well loaded at the rear ! does anybody else remember where that truck appeared and where / when ?
Yup. RP higher top speed and better accel but Mercedes braking about 25 meters later and holding tighter lines and powering on earlier.
Copying is the key word. Reverse engineering is not "copying" in the sense of direct duplication from drawings or surface data, and F1 aero parts are not copy protected.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 16:03You buy the part, not the intellectual property. Just like in real life when you buy something, you do not get the right to copy and manufacture it.dans79 wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 16:01Unless their is something in the rules that prevents that, or something in sales contract that prevents that then it would be legal.FittingMechanics wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 15:47They were sold, but that is the critical thing. Renault is betting that RacingPoint cut open a W10 brake duct from last year and copied it for this year. This is in my opinion close to being illegal.
Perez was missing apices on some corners by some margin, I think there might have been some time lost there.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 17:19Yup. RP higher top speed and better accel but Mercedes braking about 25 meters later and holding tighter lines and powering on earlier.
They are protected because they are intellectual property.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 17:28F1 aero parts are not copy protected.
A brake duct is no different that T-wing, no different than the high top side pod, or the floor slits.
Christian Horner disagrees with you. It is all about if documents were exchanged.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 18:02They are protected because they are intellectual property.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 17:28F1 aero parts are not copy protected.
A brake duct is no different that T-wing, no different than the high top side pod, or the floor slits.
The key is that only Mercedes can act to protect the design as it is theirs. If Mercedes choose not to take action to protect their IP then that's up to them.
“I’ve always stood by the fact it is easier to sell a car than to copy it,” Horner told Sky Sports F1.
“You can see the closeness of those two cars but I’m sure it is probably within the rules because they is no copyright within Formula 1.
“They can photograph, they can scan them and can recreate that shape but it depends how they have had access to those components which is what Renault is complaining about.
“But it’s the fastest route to competitiveness as Racing Point has demonstrated.”
No, it was not.