It lifts the nose after DRS closes and then it stays there. Only a while later it dives the nose as braking starts, then it stays there. There seems to be a gap where the driver has closed DRS but is not really braking?Cedo wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 18:59Another sequenceJust_a_fan wrote: ↑22 Feb 2019, 17:20That looks like the suspension sits down at the rear as speed, and downforce, increases. That it "unloads" in a single "jump" might get them looked at by other teams. A protest on the basis that the suspension steps between two positions would be on the grounds that is doing so solely for aerodynamic reasons and so is illegal. If the rear sits in a single step and then lifts back up in a single step (as it appears to do in that gif) rather than doing both gradually and proportionately to the applied downforce, then they will get told to remove it.
https://imgur.com/gallery/kVpeiOP
It seems to follow the drag of the rear sail and then the inertia of the car as it has to be convinced to slow by the tires.
It has the dynamics of seesaw with the stiffness of a standing punching bag.
Kind of like this (pardon the red horses):