snowplough?raymondu999 wrote:I think it's clear in the last two races that the McLaren front end is absolutely mighty. It's a lot stronger in the slow corners and the turn-in and direction change in the slow speed corners is awesome. Does anyone know why this is? Or at least which parts contribute to this?
They showed a similar trait last year (especially in Turkey and Monaco) before they kind of lost their way on development and developed their way into a cul-de-sac
Could that snowplough be useful to them next year to get around the low nose regs?Vasco wrote:snowplough?raymondu999 wrote:I think it's clear in the last two races that the McLaren front end is absolutely mighty. It's a lot stronger in the slow corners and the turn-in and direction change in the slow speed corners is awesome. Does anyone know why this is? Or at least which parts contribute to this?
They showed a similar trait last year (especially in Turkey and Monaco) before they kind of lost their way on development and developed their way into a cul-de-sac
What you mean the top surface of the nose, the top surface extends back to the cockpit which = full and current height. The nose tip has to be what counts or maybe the top surface at a point a certain distance behind the nose tip either way my idea still works.raymondu999 wrote:IIRC the low nose regs were done by measuring the top surface of the nose.
He means that the end of the nose is taken by working down the nose cone until you find a bit that faces downwards. You get to the upper nose first, not the "nose" of the snow plough.MIKEY_! wrote:What you mean the top surface of the nose, the top surface extends back to the cockpit which = full and current height. The nose tip has to be what counts or maybe the top surface at a point a certain distance behind the nose tip either way my idea still works.raymondu999 wrote:IIRC the low nose regs were done by measuring the top surface of the nose.