jason.parker.86 wrote:
Would this explain why the other teams thought the car had a ride height system?
Yes, since under high DF, the car will lower due to suspension setup. This is unrelated to bleeding of dampers. This also would make the car have a higher ground-clearance at low-speeds or at standstil (ie parc-fermé), which triggered the whole "ride-height" discussion in the beginnning. Obviously FIA checks the minimal required heights of ground-clearance. Do they also report back when this seems "higher-then-usual". I would expect the RB6 to have a "higher then usual" ground-clearance when empty and the minimal required during "full-load". Also a pull-rod suspension would be more usefull to achieve this compared to the typically in F1 used "push-rod". Again another good reason to guard the back of the car since the devil would be in the detail of this pull-rod suspension.
If they would combine this with the flexing of the rear-wing and possibly allow part of the diffuser to flex with the rear-wing (rear-wing attached to the diffuser and diffuser is mounted where it starts), through specific tubing/forming of your carbon-frame, you could perfectly tune where and how-much (ie under what load) the complete setup would flex. Obviously, they can't flex the sharkfin along with it because that is connected to the engine-cover which would explain what we see in the said video in the RB6 thread. This would be neigh-impossible to detect under static-loads and only visible if you would trail the car very closely at different speeds keeping a very very close eye to the ground-clearance between diffuser and ground and check for any differences.
This is what I think would make their version of the F-Duct/blown-wing very difficult to achieve. For that to work you must have a rear-wing that stays exactly in place at high speed so the precise aerodynamcs involved with F-ducts/blow-wing can work their magic. I for one am very curious to find out how Neway will implement that.
Any of the more educated forum-members to shoot holes in this theory (or confirm it if you will

)? As long as not confirmed, I consider this purely academic, but highly plausible
