
What are those for?
What they have there is not a gurney tab (a gurney tab would have no gap between the top of the diffuser and itself); it's additional bodywork in the legal area above the top of the diffuser.turbof1 wrote:Who said gurney flaps on the diffusers weren't allowed anymore? They have it all over the place.
Are the small u shaped undulations shaped between the gurney bottom edge and the diffuser top edge -at the "v" point where the u-shapes meet specifically- to (I'm guessing here) creat vortices which would / could be shaped to, in a sense, "suck" or "pull" air out from the diffuser--create an intensified low pressure vortex zone behind the diffuser itself--ie beyond the end of the car?Predator wrote:https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BfFINcACEAEkySL.jpg:large
I would have thought it would be useful to see how much KERS you have left, but they apparently got along fine without a big display for several years.djos wrote:I don't see the point to the huge displays, all a driver needs to see is gear, lap time info and when to change gear - everything else can be provided by radio if the driver needs to know it.
Gear change and DRS activation is all via audio queues in the helmet now.
Now the drivers have no control over it do it's not much use but I agree it might have been useful last year.Lycoming wrote:I would have thought it would be useful to see how much KERS you have left, but they apparently got along fine without a big display for several years.djos wrote:I don't see the point to the huge displays, all a driver needs to see is gear, lap time info and when to change gear - everything else can be provided by radio if the driver needs to know it.
Gear change and DRS activation is all via audio queues in the helmet now.
Wait... so no strategic use of KERS anymore?djos wrote:Now the drivers have no control over it do it's not much use but I agree it might have been useful last year.Lycoming wrote:I would have thought it would be useful to see how much KERS you have left, but they apparently got along fine without a big display for several years.djos wrote:I don't see the point to the huge displays, all a driver needs to see is gear, lap time info and when to change gear - everything else can be provided by radio if the driver needs to know it.
Gear change and DRS activation is all via audio queues in the helmet now.
That isn't quite true. They can select different maps for the ERS as to how they want to recover/deploy energy. Do they want the ERS to deploy a little power for a long time or lots of power for short bursts coming out of a corner. Also information on remaining fuel and how hard they can run the car with minimum fuel to finish the race. Probably lots more information.djos wrote:Now the drivers have no control over it do it's not much use but I agree it might have been useful last year.Lycoming wrote:I would have thought it would be useful to see how much KERS you have left, but they apparently got along fine without a big display for several years.djos wrote:I don't see the point to the huge displays, all a driver needs to see is gear, lap time info and when to change gear - everything else can be provided by radio if the driver needs to know it.
Gear change and DRS activation is all via audio queues in the helmet now.