
Updates to endplate VGs are very low yield now, well under 1 tenth. Bigger impact is poor flap angle by several clicks, let alone flap and wing designs by themselves
What is the significance that on one of the shrouds, the telescopic layers have been removed to leave what appears to be now a normal shroud that won't stretch or shrink?mwillems wrote: ↑14 Jun 2025, 07:17Front suspension an attempt to resolve the numb feeling at the front of the car. Pics from the race.
https://www.the-race.com/content/images ... canada.jpg
https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/land ... ren-issue/
If I understand from your description correctly .... the two differ there because one has the "aero" skin moved out of the way to facilitate adjustment (it's the active pull rod ) in which they alter the length, hence ride height, by exchange of shim stack in that link to facilitate setup. Usually in operation it will have that cover/sheath in place such that the adjustment point is not visible.mwillems wrote: ↑14 Jun 2025, 10:27What is the significance that on one of the shrouds, the telescopic layers have been removed to leave what appears to be now a normal shroud that won't stretch or shrink?mwillems wrote: ↑14 Jun 2025, 07:17Front suspension an attempt to resolve the numb feeling at the front of the car. Pics from the race.
https://www.the-race.com/content/images ... canada.jpg
https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/land ... ren-issue/
Am I reading too much into this, or was something happening that was preventing forces reaching the car and possibly stopping horizontal forces from disturbing the tyres contact with the road, that has now been removed, or at least move elsewhere out of sight?
Ahh OK, so the picture on the left is an outlier in that normally you would not see that telescopic sheath and this is not suggesting they are doing anything differently here?Farnborough wrote: ↑14 Jun 2025, 10:56If I understand from your description correctly .... the two differ there because one has the "aero" skin moved out of the way to facilitate adjustment (it's the active pull rod ) in which they alter the length, hence ride height, by exchange of shim stack in that link to facilitate setup. Usually in operation it will have that cover/sheath in place such that the adjustment point is not visible.mwillems wrote: ↑14 Jun 2025, 10:27What is the significance that on one of the shrouds, the telescopic layers have been removed to leave what appears to be now a normal shroud that won't stretch or shrink?mwillems wrote: ↑14 Jun 2025, 07:17Front suspension an attempt to resolve the numb feeling at the front of the car. Pics from the race.
https://www.the-race.com/content/images ... canada.jpg
https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/land ... ren-issue/
Am I reading too much into this, or was something happening that was preventing forces reaching the car and possibly stopping horizontal forces from disturbing the tyres contact with the road, that has now been removed, or at least move elsewhere out of sight?
You can also see on lowest link in image that there's vertical separation/joint in the sheath to make telescopic movement possible as that's the steering arm which needs to change in length for turning the wheel upright when lock is applied via steering wheel. Effectively they call this "track rod" in general description.
Well yeah, to an amateur like me I assumed like for like and thought there was something in it!f1rules wrote: ↑14 Jun 2025, 12:18Are the race dead serious, they show an old picture where the carbon cover has been removed, pushed down for they can adjustIt doesnt look like that all the time lol, these so called journalists, some times
https://www.the-race.com/content/images ... mage1.jpeg
venkyhere wrote: ↑17 Mar 2025, 12:57I am inclined to think that McLaren have found a clever 'additional component/geometry' (the silver bullet) across their load bearing wishbones, roll bar and the front track rod ; in such a way, that the difference in camber across the front wheels ( that will depend on : lateral load (speed carried), longitudinal load (braking/acceleration) & curvature (slip angle) of a corner ) is "optimized" to ensure the best possible contact patch, for all possible camber and air pressure settings that are track specific. The innovation is not aero or front wings, but purely mechanical. Perhaps the 'weird' front suspension geometry with it's peculiar track rod positioning, is ostensibly for aero-wash benefits, but actually for something clever like this, and the aero-benefit is a corollary.
Of course, this is blind conjecture and I am not formally trained as a mechanical engineer.