It means that Ferrari are ensuring that it is legal before they commit resources to copy it!
Maybe expect Ferrari to be trying this trick in abudahbi testing.
Exactly. Added to this is the fact that outwash from the rear wheels is basically a waste of air that could be put to use in the diffuser. Its almost certain that this is the kernel of the argument that Merc made to prove that their purpose is not aerodynamic.PlatinumZealot wrote: β19 Oct 2018, 10:50The Red Bull holes are on the wheel hub on the base of the spindle. Air travels through from inside the spindle out and shoots through the wheels rim. This set up is on the front wheel and when the wheels steer affects the downstream aero votrices.santos wrote: β18 Oct 2018, 16:17Well, thanks for answering... but i stay the same. What are the differences for being ilegal and the other being legal?siskue2005 wrote: β18 Oct 2018, 15:52
In short Redbull used it as a aero device and Merc is not using it as a aero device.
The Mercedes holes are only on the back side of the wheel rim. The air travels from the cake tin - into a cavity between it and the wheel face then through the holes in the rim.
The Mercedes one slams the air into the backside of the spokes which thrashes the air around ...not veryThis aerodynamic is it? It not used for aerodynamics but for temperature management of the wheel. I belive it is heating than cooling.
Also this is on the rear wheel doesn't move under any controlled manner.
More likely trying to get it banned to help their cause this season.PlatinumZealot wrote: β19 Oct 2018, 12:33It means that Ferrari are ensuring that it is legal before they commit resources to copy it!
Maybe expect Ferrari to be trying this trick in abudahbi testing.
My original theory is that the device is used for heating the tyres, much to the opposite of the common view that is is for cooling. Blistering events in recent races seems to support my theory too.Just_a_fan wrote: β19 Oct 2018, 14:57More likely trying to get it banned to help their cause this season.PlatinumZealot wrote: β19 Oct 2018, 12:33It means that Ferrari are ensuring that it is legal before they commit resources to copy it!
Maybe expect Ferrari to be trying this trick in abudahbi testing.
Ferrari don't need it because they don't need to cool their rear tyres.
If blistering comes from the tire core being hotter than the surface, then it's a heatsink, meant to draw some of that excess heat out.PlatinumZealot wrote: β20 Oct 2018, 05:34My original theory is that the device is used for heating the tyres, much to the opposite of the common view that is is for cooling. Blistering events in recent races seems to support my theory too.Just_a_fan wrote: β19 Oct 2018, 14:57More likely trying to get it banned to help their cause this season.PlatinumZealot wrote: β19 Oct 2018, 12:33It means that Ferrari are ensuring that it is legal before they commit resources to copy it!
Maybe expect Ferrari to be trying this trick in abudahbi testing.
Ferrari don't need it because they don't need to cool their rear tyres.
It seems maybe it wasn't really declared legal, see my post in the Austin race thread just nowJust_a_fan wrote: β19 Oct 2018, 14:57More likely trying to get it banned to help their cause this season.PlatinumZealot wrote: β19 Oct 2018, 12:33It means that Ferrari are ensuring that it is legal before they commit resources to copy it!
Maybe expect Ferrari to be trying this trick in abudahbi testing.
Ferrari don't need it because they don't need to cool their rear tyres.
I would rather call the source "questionable". Motorsport usually has a rather good reputation on reporting such things. That being said, it's very strange only the Italian version mentions this. I would not immediately dismiss it, but also not take it for granted either.Just_a_fan wrote: β22 Oct 2018, 15:21Yeah, as pointed out in the race thread, that tweet is totally without any evidence. The referenced website doesn't have a story on it although the Italian version does. Fake news until someone else shows evidence that it's true.
also the overnight tyre pressure increase might have also contibutedWaikeCU wrote: β22 Oct 2018, 15:58I would say COTA this year is a doozy, because race day was entirely different conditions compared to Friday and Saturday, so I think teams had limited time to prepare a well thought race setup. So in that way, I think the W09 is probably more difficult to setup than the Ferrari. The Ferrari is probably per default a good car to drive.
Mercedes changed the water pumps on both its cars ahead of the race after identifying problems after qualifying, when the component on Valtteri Bottas's W09 had a leak and data on Hamilton's car also indicated an issue.
He said: "You saw the car was in a million pieces [at the start of the day] so it wasn't ideal for the race.
"Probably if we hadn't had to have a morning like that, our race outcome would have been a bit different."
"But there was more on top of that, which we've just been talking about - and to how much of an extent that is," said Hamilton.
"In the race there was some debris, some damage on the floor, all these different things add up.
"A couple of tenths in floor damage, [but you] have to assume everyone else had the same thing.
"We had another problem that we just discovered but we don't know how much time that is."
Hamilton would not elaborate on that problem, but described it as an "outlier" that he struggled for pace and used his tyres aggressively.
"We were forced into a two-stop race for certain things we had that weren't ideal with the car," he said.
"We didn't know that was going to be the case when we got into the race.
"If we hadn't had the problem we've had, tyre usage wouldn't have been anywhere near as big an issue as we had."
Mercedes technical director James Allison suggested the team had suffered from the lack of dry running until Saturday morning.
"We normally get the car in a happier place than this, but with Friday being washed out we were blind to the problems we experienced today," he said.
"They were cruelly exposed today and they led to the disappointing outcome."