technical regulations for cars from 2005 to 2008.

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echedey
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Joined: 25 Oct 2019, 23:52

technical regulations for cars from 2005 to 2008.

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hello, by any chance does anyone have the technical regulation of how to design a f1 car from 2005 to 2008 with the example drawings of the dimensions of the car, I'm looking for it and I can't find it, I can only find the articles, but I prefer the regulation with the dimensioned drawings of how the car has to be as an example.

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jjn9128
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Joined: 02 May 2017, 23:53

Re: technical regulations for cars from 2005 to 2008.

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there were no drawings in the rules before 2017(?).

Somers published some old regs
http://www.somersf1.co.uk/p/fia-formula ... tions.html
#aerogandalf
"There is one big friend. It is downforce. And once you have this it’s a big mate and it’s helping a lot." Robert Kubica

Hutchie.91
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Joined: 15 Feb 2022, 16:25

Re: technical regulations for cars from 2005 to 2008.

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Interesting that for the 2000 season at least, V10s weren't mandatory like the following V8 and V6 regs, 3.0 V12s were allowed, but no-one ran. Obviously not a new notion as in the past multiple engine configurations were allowed in terms of cylinder number, arrangement and aspiration during a season.\

Edit: Except of course 2006 when Toro Rosso and maybe Super Aguri (?) were running 2005 spec rev limited V10s when the grid switched to the 2.4 V8s.

johnny comelately
110
Joined: 10 Apr 2015, 00:55
Location: Australia

Re: technical regulations for cars from 2005 to 2008.

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jjn9128 wrote:
25 May 2022, 22:14
there were no drawings in the rules before 2017(?).

Somers published some old regs
http://www.somersf1.co.uk/p/fia-formula ... tions.html
Handy link, whats fascinating in there is in the 1968 technical regulations they have an equivalence equation for turbine engines.
When did Andy Granatelli (memory) run the STP car??

Tommy Cookers
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Joined: 17 Feb 2012, 16:55

Re: technical regulations for cars from 2005 to 2008.

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:oops:
johnny comelately wrote:
25 May 2022, 23:41
... in the 1968 technical regulations they have an equivalence equation for turbine engines.
When did Andy Granatelli (memory) run the STP car??
1967 STP Indy
1968 Lotus 56 was winning the Indy 500 till it shut itself down (so-called fuel pump failure)
1971 Lotus 56B ran in 3 WDC GPs with one 8th place (Monza ??)
https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/anyt ... tus-f1-car

the Howmet car that did well in the WEC we now know had an oversize engine
Rover ran quite well at Le Mans endurance with turbine cars
Last edited by Tommy Cookers on 26 May 2022, 11:33, edited 6 times in total.

johnny comelately
110
Joined: 10 Apr 2015, 00:55
Location: Australia

Re: technical regulations for cars from 2005 to 2008.

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Image

johnny comelately
110
Joined: 10 Apr 2015, 00:55
Location: Australia

Re: technical regulations for cars from 2005 to 2008.

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
26 May 2022, 10:14
:oops:
johnny comelately wrote:
25 May 2022, 23:41
... in the 1968 technical regulations they have an equivalence equation for turbine engines.
When did Andy Granatelli (memory) run the STP car??
1967 STP Indy
1968 Lotus 56 was winning the Indy 500 till it shut itself down (so-called fuel pump failure)
1971 Lotus 56B ran in 3 WDC GPs with one 8th place (Monza ??)
https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/anyt ... tus-f1-car

the Howmet car that did well in the WEC we now know had an oversize engine
Rover ran quite well at Le Mans endurance with turbine cars
From the Autocar article
Wonder if Emerson is still chasing some extra cash for driving it...
Re John Miles, worth a read:
"In 1969, Miles had to develop the Lotus 63 4WD car while World Champion Graham Hill and Jochen Rindt refused to drive this design, considering it a death trap. In five GPs, Miles finished only once, in 10th place. In between, the car was given twice to Mario Andretti, but he did not finish either. Miles did qualify mid-grid for the Canadian GP at Mosport, where the difficult combination of fast sweeping bends suited the 4-wheel-drive Lotus 63, which was a 'disaster' on twisty tracks.[3]

After Graham Hill had broken his legs in late 1969, he did not return to Team Lotus, driving Lotus cars for the Rob Walker Racing Team instead. Miles was promoted to number two Lotus F1 driver behind Jochen Rindt for the 1970 Formula One season. In the 1970 South African Grand Prix, where a total of five Lotus cars were entered, he finished fifth in a Lotus 49 with Hill behind him. Miles had driven most of the race with petrol leaking over him, but Colin Chapman expressed dissatisfaction he had not taken Beltoise for fourth. For the Spanish GP, the new Lotus 72 was entered, but Miles failed to qualify for the race in which Rindt had to retire early. Due to the problems with the 72, the updated Lotus 49C was used in Monaco, with Miles driving a few practice laps in the 72, and failing to qualify in the 49C. Graham Hill was slower in practice, but had a guaranteed grid place as a past World Champion, and was allocated Miles's 49C for the race, which was won by Rindt. In Belgium, Miles raced the 72, while Rindt relied on the old 49C, and both had to retire. In Zandvoort, the 72 finally proved to be competitive, with Rindt qualifying on pole and winning, while Miles qualified and finished seventh in the race, driving a more experimental and difficult, version of the 72, which retained much of Chapman's anti-squat and anti-dive roadholding features, and was a handful, if having excellent brakes. Miles made an excellent start, jumping into fifth and was running in the opening laps with eight of the greatest GP drivers nose to tail, held behind by good line, brakes and skilful blocking or the luck of a tyro in auto sport. Regazzoni got past when Miles missed a gear on lap 6 and Piers Courage passed Miles on lap 12. After that an intense midfield duel developed as Miles fought to hold off Jean-Pierre Beltoise and John Surtees. Rindt required real skill to lap the trio threading through on laps 30–33, ultimately just flagged past by his teammate. Beltoise was not able to get the Matra past the deep braking Miles's 72 until the slippery lap 49, Surtees also got past on the lap, but was immediately retaken by the Miles 72 and Surtees did not finally secure the 6th place point, until he got past four laps from the flag with the 72's brakes effectively gone. In France, Rindt won again in the 72 despite an injury, while Miles finished outside the points once again, although on the same lap as his team leader.

By now, it was evident that Miles was thoroughly overshadowed by his team leader who won five races to earn the F1 World Championship that year. According to Miles, Chapman regarded him 'as a sort of grease monkey' and paid him a mere 300 pounds per race,[3] out of which he had to pay his own travel expenses, occasionally supplemented by a roll of notes, on request, from Chapman's back pocket to get Miles back to England.[3]

For the British GP, Lotus cars founder and Team Lotus principal Chapman started to enter a third car with Emerson Fittipaldi. With the reliable 49C, the young Brazilian finished his first three GPs while Miles had to retire in both races, dogged by a hairline fracture in the water pipes, leading to retirement at quarter distance and slowing his progress during the race at Brands and Hockenheim, when finally running with a 72, close to Rindt's 72 specifications, he would have been reasonably competitive. Miles qualified seventh at Brands Hatch, 1.2 seconds slower than Rindt on pole, who beat Brabham on the finishing line to win the British GP. Rindt scored a final victory at Hockenheim where Miles qualified tenth and diced with Surtees and Denny Hulme, until the Lotus 72's Cosworth blew. With the three car team, Miles's car did not get the same attention as Chapman obviously saw Fittipaldi as the future, as his old Lotus was seriously prepared and finished eighth and fourth in the British and German races, while the failure to discover, the fracture leaking water saw Miles retire at both races and had blown three Cosworth V8s during the practice sessions. During the Hockenheim practice sessions, Miles spent many laps providing a slipstream tow to enable Fittipaldi to qualify. Rindt said "a monkey could have won in the car" (the 72) and told Miles who qualified tenth, two seconds behind Rindt, that he was mystified than Miles didn't drive faster, as two seconds slower was no safer in Rindt's view. This may have been true in a Lotus 72 as Miles qualified on the fifth row again at the next race in Austria, a new, high speed lethal circuit. Miles found himself without braking on the fourth lap: 'coming through the downhill before the final corner, my left front brake shaft broke'.[3] Matters came to a head at the Italian GP, where Chapman ordered Miles to follow Rindt in running a new Lotus 72 without front and rear wings to take advantage of the Monza circuit's long straights and fast, low-downforce corners. Miles reluctantly complied but was concerned by the wingless 72's handling on the straights. His teammate Rindt was killed when one of the brake shafts on his new Type 72 failed and his car veered off the track, ploughing into the steel barrier which was placed too high for the revolutionary wedge design of the 72. Rindt, who had only recently acquiesced to wearing a simple lap belt, slid underneath and had his throat cut by the belt buckle. That was too much for Miles, who was widely regarded as too cerebral and sensitive to fit Chapman's idea of a race driver, and he left the team. The team skipped the next race in Canada, and at Watkins Glen, Reine Wisell drove the second Lotus car, while Fittipaldi won, thereby securing both championships for Lotus.

Miles was signed for BRM for 1971, Lou and Jean Stanley recruiting him at the Dorchester, a precursor to the signing of Niki Lauda, (as seen in the doco/drama film, 'Rush') with Lou making a phone call to Bourne to receive the apparent reply that yet another 20 hp was being produced by the BRM V12 on the dyno. He was employed mainly as a test driver and raced in two non-championship rounds at Brands Hatch and Hockenheim in the BRM and also won the British sports car championship that year in 2-litre sports cars – in a Chevron B19 he beat a competitive field, including Chris Craft and Wilson Fittipaldi.[4]

A qualified mechanical engineer, Miles later made a name for himself working for Lotus's road car division. He wrote a column, "Miles Behind The Wheel", for Autocar magazine, giving his road impressions of sportier cars. "

echedey
2
Joined: 25 Oct 2019, 23:52

Re: technical regulations for cars from 2005 to 2008.

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then someone has photos of the copick of the ferrari f2008? to see if I can model it in 3d only the chassis or the copick also go getting photos of the parts of the car loose to have better image.

echedey
2
Joined: 25 Oct 2019, 23:52

Re: technical regulations for cars from 2005 to 2008.

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image of the regulations from 2000 to 2008 of the dimensions of those cars.
Image

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