venkyhere wrote: ↑29 Jun 2026, 16:55
Re : cooling architecture
(apologies for the picture quality, screengrabbed from a paywalled article)
https://ibb.co/qLYWcHfL
The Redbull has an air-to-air IC and still has much tighter cooling exits compared to the Ferrari. So many openings on the SF26 because of the hot'ter' engine, hot'ter' intake air concept ? The engine cover doesn't seem any smaller either, and the Redbull has a waterslide sidepod whilst the Ferrari has a much bigger one, so what was the advantage of 'sacrificing cooling for packaging benefits' ?
Moreover, Hamilton was asked to lower his engine mode in the race. What's happening guys ?
I think it is difficult to compare such small differences by eye, especially volumes, aeras.
Also the intake size matters too, and not only its size its exact location as well. There are faster stronger air speeds and slower ones around, and where you put your intake matters in regards to received air volume and the cars overall drag.
So I do not think we can truly draw conclusions.
The RB has larger air intake for sure, over the drivers helmet.
And we do not know how much Ferrari had to push its engine compared to RB. Think about that the Ferrari engine supposedly is weaker, so the RB engine can run at a lower power mode for similar results, hence lower cooling.
To top this up, it matters big time if you run in dirty air or free air, temperature wise.
So I see waaay too many variables to draw conclusions.
Now I remember, there can be differences in drag within the cooling system, and air speeds as well
Edit: some people suggested that their heating problem was not even the engine but the batteries.