scarbs wrote:The figures dont seem realstic, most teams are beleived to be in the region of 48%F 52% rear.
For Ferrari to get to this 55% forward biased distribution they need to move 42Kg of weight forward in comparison to the 48/52% scenario. Bearing in mind the car went to zero keel which is a little lighter on the front end than the old single keel, this is a hell of a lot to add.
However the team did make the chassis longer by 10cm, this allows for a longer t-tray (front spliter). To make up this extra ballast up the front the splitter would have to be two inches thick and in solid tungsten. The Ferrari front floor is heavy, But I dont beleive it is thick enough to shift that amount of weight forwards.
Of course some weight coudl be elsewhere in the base of the raised chassis, nose or front wing...
Scarbs
Reading the WMSC
script it seems fairly clear from Lowe's and others' comments, in the context of earlier events, that they're pushing mass forward as much as they can. Renault is given as an example of a team that has suffered particularly from their earlier (well documented) weight distribution and images from earlier testing featuring what looked like ballast attached to Renault's front wing would seem to support this notion. Also, what is noteworthy about McLaren's episode with their Hungary gearbox (being run without a mandatory crash test) is that it was specifically pointed out that it was designed to be lighter. Perhaps, in the light of later revelations, this observation was a deliberate shot across McLaren's (now apparently heavier) bow.
As the minimum weight of the car is a zero sum game, the haste and nature of the gearbox design change is indication that the team is in a hurry to transfer as much mass to the front as possible and taking it from wherever they can. And, since the Ferrari weight distribution seemed to be of particular interest to de la Rosa and Alonso, surprised comments and all, perhaps it wouldn't be too farfetched to imagine that for some reason a radically forward weight bias is the most advantageous one this season. Of course it's still impossible to decipher from this whether 55/45 is anywhere near the truth.