

and then later reprised in a slightly different version by John Barnard on the 1996 Ferrari F310!


The second one, with the raised pelican nose as opposed to the original version, was the 'evo' version introduced around the Canadian GP in 1996. They couldn't modify the front end of the chassis so they just raised the crash-box-nose. Yes pretty ugly i agree
Interesting, although there's a huge mistake... i don't know if Nichols memory serves him badly there or if it's up to the reporter/editor: in 1992 Ferrari didn't mount active ride suspensions!Just_a_fan wrote: ↑23 Apr 2019, 17:42Article about the F92A. https://www.autosport.com/f1/feature/42 ... us-failure
Surface radiators were a very viable solution for the Schneider Trophy racing seaplanes of the interwar era, and did not require a rough surface at all. They were basically a corrugated copper sheet with an upper and lower skin. The Gloster examples were made as a sleeve that literally slid onto the wings. The Supermarine S6 and S6B of 1929 and 1931 also had surface oil cooling, but this did require some external corrugation - the oil was fed back along the sides of the fuselage within small longitudinal 'ribs', into the tail fin which was itself a surface radiator, and back to the engine.netoperek wrote: ↑16 Apr 2019, 18:20You'd need to maximise surface area of the bodywork, either with some micro fins, which would got banned in the milisecond or with some really rough finish, which could end up in destroying whole aero (or not, I've no cluehollus wrote: ↑16 Apr 2019, 17:49Cooling bodywork instead of radiators:
http://www.grandprixhistory.org/brab46.htm
I wonder if this would be doable now that there is less cooling to do. Also, considering the amount of electrical energy available in the car... could one "Peltierize" the car's skin? Or just water circulating through a double layer skin. As a plus, the cars could be covered in shiny copper
Chances are that it would, once again, make the car slower.
I guess the chances are also stratospheric that it would be outlawed immediately.)
Maybe embedding heatpipes into construction/bodywork parts?