Hopefully this diagram helps to explain:

Thanks now I understand. I didn't know about the 550mm limit. I thought it was the tip of the nose instead. So I guess McLaren have chosen to lower the entire front bulkhead to smoothly transition into the 550mm nosecone base limit. And thereby risking reduced underbody airflow?jordangp wrote:The bottom IS as high as it can be. The front bulkhead (Where chassis meets nosecone, where drop starts) has to be a mandated dimension of 300mm x 275mm. This is placed as high as possible, Meaning the top is at 625mm above reference plane. However 150mm forward of this, it can only be 550mm above reference plane, causing this drop off of 75mm.
Exactly.gold333 wrote:Thanks now I understand. I didn't know about the 550mm limit. I thought it was the tip of the nose instead. So I guess McLaren have chosen to lower the entire front bulkhead to smoothly transition into the 550mm nosecone base limit. And thereby risking reduced underbody airflow?jordangp wrote:The bottom IS as high as it can be. The front bulkhead (Where chassis meets nosecone, where drop starts) has to be a mandated dimension of 300mm x 275mm. This is placed as high as possible, Meaning the top is at 625mm above reference plane. However 150mm forward of this, it can only be 550mm above reference plane, causing this drop off of 75mm.
This is what I felt in regard to the short rear wing/huge front wing, drs, kers and pirelli's uber-degredation. Whoever drafts these regulations has no sense of subtilty whatsoever.gold333 wrote:Does anyone else think the FIA may actually be incompetent as a governing body when drafting technical regulations?
I think that some people misunderstand the rules. No one forced Ferrari to have top of the AA bulkhead at 625mm. That is not in the rules. It was their choice not to have a drop of chassis towards front from BB to AA like Mclaren already had last year.jordangp wrote:
Do you realise it is in the interest of (almost) all teams to increase underbody airflow? Since F1 cars run a stepped and not flat bottom -> therefore high noses, since 1995. With this regulation I think it will be the exception that a team has a 2012 McLaren nose.manchild wrote:I think that some people misunderstand the rules. No one forced Ferrari to have top of the AA bulkhead at 625mm. That is not in the rules. It was their choice not to have a drop of chassis towards front from BB to AA like Mclaren already had last year.jordangp wrote:
It was obviously their decision not to redesign the chassis, but to adapt nose and rest of the car to 2012 regulations. If they wanted a smooth transition between upper plane of the nose and upper plane of the chassis, than they had to redesign chassis as I've already explained.
Mclaren had such declination of upper planes towards front end in the previous season, so they basically had no problems with 2012 regulations, even with old chassis.
Look at the pics above, Mclaren has BB at 625 and AA at 550, while Ferrari has both BB and AA at 625. That is why Ferrari nose is fugly, it simply can't be prettier in chosen constellation.
I was talking about existing cars. Most of the teams already had it raised to max height for years, one of them was Ferrari. Unlike them, Mclaren lowered the chassis and the nose last year, scoring 122 more points than Ferrari, and maintained design trend for 2012.gold333 wrote:Do you realise it is in the interest of (almost) all teams to increase underbody airflow? Since F1 cars run a stepped and not flat bottom -> therefore high noses, since 1995. With this regulation I think it will be the exception that a team has a 2012 McLaren nose.
Most will simply try to increase underbody flow, therefore raise the tub height to the maximum and live with the grotesque nose design at the point the nose has to be no higher than a certain height (550mm).
Not necessarilyjordangp wrote:And to get some better airflow quality, you would need a large area under the nose anyway?
ask him how that worked outbhallg2k wrote:I saw this in another forum. It was posted before the launch of any 2012 car.
Thank goodness something is being done in this arena. Beyond the safety aspects, to me, the high noses have been an aesthetic abomination and any lowering of them can only improve the looks of the cars.