It doesnt break Parcferma
It's not. DAS was legal from the get go because there were no rules that cover it.
I agree. But lets be fair, all teams have flexing front wings. The basic design of the wing makes the flaps susceptible to compression. RB's front wing flexes almost as much too.carisi2k wrote: ↑25 May 2021, 07:03Obviously some people on here haven't seen Mercedes flexing front wings or the flexing shark fin which give Mercedes more of a straightline benefit by stalling the rear wing at high speeds. If the FIA are going to increase the tests for the rear wing they should also increase the test for these other areas that Merecedes are trying to exploit as well.
At the very least it has an effect of reduced weight up top due to less than required strengthening of entire structure to prevent it from jumping all over the place.
If Redbull use a flexing wing why they just make it at rear? Of course they will push everywhere they can gain with this approach. Isn't this what everyone do to find performance?e30ernest wrote: ↑25 May 2021, 07:12I agree. But lets be fair, all teams have flexing front wings. The basic design of the wing makes the flaps susceptible to compression. RB's front wing flexes almost as much too.carisi2k wrote: ↑25 May 2021, 07:03Obviously some people on here haven't seen Mercedes flexing front wings or the flexing shark fin which give Mercedes more of a straightline benefit by stalling the rear wing at high speeds. If the FIA are going to increase the tests for the rear wing they should also increase the test for these other areas that Merecedes are trying to exploit as well.
Now the sharkfin/T-Wing combo, if the floppiness of them adds an advantage, then yes they should also be checked. I find it odd no team is protesting that yet though. Maybe it has no effect.
Lousy comparison. Ferrari got more out of their engine not by circumventing the rule but by fooling the control system and breaking the rules. That's fraud. Red Bull isn't fooling the control system, they comply to the rules but found a way to create flex anyway, that's engineering.e30ernest wrote: ↑25 May 2021, 06:45It's not. DAS was legal from the get go because there were no rules that cover it.
I'll probably get a lot of hate when I say this, I see the flexi-wings as more akin to the Ferrari engine issue in 2019. The engine at the time passed the tests (scrutineering) but it was actually circumventing the rules. The bending wings (my last mention of that here in this thread, sorry mods) are like that. They pass the test, but they go against the rules.
Your front wing comment lost you alot of credibility for the rest of your post.e30ernest wrote: ↑25 May 2021, 07:12I agree. But lets be fair, all teams have flexing front wings. The basic design of the wing makes the flaps susceptible to compression. RB's front wing flexes almost as much too.carisi2k wrote: ↑25 May 2021, 07:03Obviously some people on here haven't seen Mercedes flexing front wings or the flexing shark fin which give Mercedes more of a straightline benefit by stalling the rear wing at high speeds. If the FIA are going to increase the tests for the rear wing they should also increase the test for these other areas that Merecedes are trying to exploit as well.
Now the sharkfin/T-Wing combo, if the floppiness of them adds an advantage, then yes they should also be checked. I find it odd no team is protesting that yet though. Maybe it has no effect.
But it's still broke the spirit of the rules of not being able to alter suspension geometry after, the same as what the Fia are saying about rear wing on RBR. Rear wing is legal and passes tests. They are just saying it breaks the spirit of rules. So why didn't they ban DAS in season?
I didn't say it was right. I said it was difficult for them not to flex because of how they are designed. The flaps only main attachment point is the endplate. There's a reason why the cars for 2022 have the flaps attached both to the endplate and the nose cone.Datco wrote: ↑25 May 2021, 09:36Your front wing comment lost you alot of credibility for the rest of your post.e30ernest wrote: ↑25 May 2021, 07:12I agree. But lets be fair, all teams have flexing front wings. The basic design of the wing makes the flaps susceptible to compression. RB's front wing flexes almost as much too.carisi2k wrote: ↑25 May 2021, 07:03Obviously some people on here haven't seen Mercedes flexing front wings or the flexing shark fin which give Mercedes more of a straightline benefit by stalling the rear wing at high speeds. If the FIA are going to increase the tests for the rear wing they should also increase the test for these other areas that Merecedes are trying to exploit as well.
Now the sharkfin/T-Wing combo, if the floppiness of them adds an advantage, then yes they should also be checked. I find it odd no team is protesting that yet though. Maybe it has no effect.
Just because everybody has it does not make it legal. Are you saying that if everybody figured out how to make the rear wing flex you also would not support changes. The fact is there are tests for both front and rear. Cars pass the test but still flex on track. The question is why are the Fia only picking on the rear wing?
Indeed, Vasseur said this is a madness for a small team like Alpha if they have to produce new ones.
This is it really, it's just another tactic to put Red Bull under pressure.