mwillems wrote: ↑20 Mar 2025, 16:57
SB15 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2025, 15:50
bauc wrote: ↑20 Mar 2025, 12:57
Suspension will always compress under load
You would assume that, but It’s not just the suspension.
The whole wing is moving under load.
How the McLaren and Mercedes engineers manage to do this I have no idea why, but it’s very clever.
He's joking that the wing is on suspension because it's is the whole assembly that is flexible
It's easy to miss, but it leans back
and also the whole thing "squats" down.
Its absolutely routine in structures and materials.
As example, an A 380 airbus has wing tips moving up by 4 mtrs, yes that's four whole meters, under takeoff loading.
Most things do, but not recognised. Ever seen a Chinook helicopter blade that nearly touches the ground at stationary with front rotor, to bend significantly upwards as lift comes onto that blade structure.
These all types of that materials science topic.
Not to mention bridges
