Red Bull RB16

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wesley123
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Joined: 23 Feb 2008, 17:55

Re: Red Bull RB16

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ryaan2904 wrote:
19 Nov 2020, 06:06
wesley123 wrote:
19 Nov 2020, 00:14
ryaan2904 wrote:
18 Nov 2020, 12:17
1. Yes exactly, but they are losing energy by directing some air to the underside which could have been energizing the created vortices. I also did mention you lose a little energy, so yes, whether its an advantage or a disadvantage is debatable.

2. High rake increases the distance between the diffuser at the back and the ground. So, especially at low speeds, you have to work to speed up the airflow at the back. But that's still manageable, the major issue is to prevent air entering from the sides into the underbody. High rake cars suffer much more from this than low rake cars. Air entering from the sides will slow the air down and thus reduce diffuser efficiency. Hence floor sealing is even more important for Redbull.
Redbull and Mercedes both work with two very different underbody philosophies. Redbull generates downforce by increasing Mass flow in the underbody. Mercedes generate downforce by squeezing and speeding up already existing air in the underbody.
You're trying to simplify it a bit too much, just like is said in the article you posted after this. Both solutions have their gains and losses, and something as rake isn't the holy grail; there is a whole car to it.

To say that Mercedes would lose less from this is unreasonable, as in the end they converge around similar solutions. Outside of that, there is literally no reason to help Mercedes to begin with. F1 would gain quite a lot in slowing down Mercedes.

The simple fact of the matter is that currently, Mercedes simply is the better team. The FIA isn't helping anyone here.
Yes, I may be missing things here but "Mercedes simply is the better team" doesn't exactly help me see them :lol:
Let's be honest here; There'll be no way at all to prove you to be wrong, simply by the way that the situation currently is.
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godlameroso
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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I'm not sold that Mercedes has the best chassis, the RB16 is faster in slow corners, implying more downforce. Especially in long sweeping corners that don't require much braking.

We cannot conclude that RBR16B will be worse off with the regulation change. Consider the Honda engine of next year will be even more compact than the one in the car now, and Mercedes rumored intake being bulkier could set them back chassis wise. I say this because the rear wing will be more important and the intake and engine cover affect flow to the rear wing.
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Wouter
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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The Power of Dreams!

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ispano6
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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Red Bull's Turkey updates.
Front wing that only Max raced, revised exhaust breather pipes and diffuser.

Max wing
Image

Alex wing
Image

Cape update
Image

Exhaust layout change
Image

Diffuser changes
Image

From https://us.motorsport.com/f1/news/red-b ... r/4913209/

holeindalip
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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godlameroso wrote:
19 Nov 2020, 18:59
I'm not sold that Mercedes has the best chassis, the RB16 is faster in slow corners, implying more downforce. Especially in long sweeping corners that don't require much braking.

We cannot conclude that RBR16B will be worse off with the regulation change. Consider the Honda engine of next year will be even more compact than the one in the car now, and Mercedes rumored intake being bulkier could set them back chassis wise. I say this because the rear wing will be more important and the intake and engine cover affect flow to the rear wing.
Isn’t that why they run high rake to keep the rear wing up higher and during high speed the car squats, or do you believe the Red Bull has a massive mechanical grip over Mercedes? I would think that if they had a massive mechanical grip advantage over Mercedes tire wear would be much more?

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godlameroso
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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holeindalip wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 05:05
godlameroso wrote:
19 Nov 2020, 18:59
I'm not sold that Mercedes has the best chassis, the RB16 is faster in slow corners, implying more downforce. Especially in long sweeping corners that don't require much braking.

We cannot conclude that RBR16B will be worse off with the regulation change. Consider the Honda engine of next year will be even more compact than the one in the car now, and Mercedes rumored intake being bulkier could set them back chassis wise. I say this because the rear wing will be more important and the intake and engine cover affect flow to the rear wing.
Isn’t that why they run high rake to keep the rear wing up higher and during high speed the car squats, or do you believe the Red Bull has a massive mechanical grip over Mercedes? I would think that if they had a massive mechanical grip advantage over Mercedes tire wear would be much more?
Depends on the aero balance, if the aero balance is towards oversteer because it lets you carry more speed in the mid corner phase, then the rear will slide around more than the front causing more tire wear than if the car is more balanced in general.

I always thought rake was more for the floor than the rear wing, although the rear wing and floor work together, so who knows, maybe you're right.

Mugello Germany and Imola had the type of corners that aren't really penalized by having a bit of entry oversteer. Because the corners require strong change of direction, and understeer hurts you because it forces you to brake sooner. And also because the exits were in a speed range where the diffuser could really start working. They had a small aero advantage and were pretty close to Mercedes. The recent updates have only strengthened their low speed advantage, which they will once again lose and spend half the season clawing back. #-o
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zibby43
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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godlameroso wrote:
19 Nov 2020, 18:59
I'm not sold that Mercedes has the best chassis, the RB16 is faster in slow corners, implying more downforce. Especially in long sweeping corners that don't require much braking.
Slow corner performance isn't really about peak downforce. It's about mechanical grip and setup.

With respect to general chassis performance, Mercedes was fastest in all types of corners up until the engine mode TD.

An example from Spain 2020, which is obviously one of the benchmarks for a chassis, because of the various types of corners:

Image

After the TD, Mercedes made compromises to their setup to trade off cornering speed for more pace in a straightline. There was a pretty good technical article about this (from FUnoAnalisiTecnica) which I posted in a thread on here a while back.

With the exception of 1 race, Mercedes has been the class of the field with respect to tire management this year, implying a tremendous amount of downforce. The more downforce you have, the more you flatten the tire and generate temperature evenly across the surface of the tread, which not only helps with performance, but with tire wear as well.

Finally, Mercedes stopped developing their car a while ago, while Red Bull has obviously forged on.

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Moore77
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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godlameroso wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 05:37
Mugello Germany and Imola had the type of corners that aren't really penalized by having a bit of entry oversteer.
What exactly is "entry oversteer"? Understeer on entry is understandable, but "entry oversteer"?
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e30ernest
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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Moore77 wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 14:43
godlameroso wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 05:37
Mugello Germany and Imola had the type of corners that aren't really penalized by having a bit of entry oversteer.
What exactly is "entry oversteer"? Understeer on entry is understandable, but "entry oversteer"?
Probably a tendency to swing the back out under braking or acceleration when the rear tires gets unloaded.

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jjn9128
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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Moore77 wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 14:43
What exactly is "entry oversteer"? Understeer on entry is understandable, but "entry oversteer"?
Comes with an unstable rear axle. The back wants to swing round on the initial turn in. E.g. Locked rear axle would result in entry oversteer.
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"There is one big friend. It is downforce. And once you have this it’s a big mate and it’s helping a lot." Robert Kubica

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SiLo
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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jjn9128 wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 14:51
Moore77 wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 14:43
What exactly is "entry oversteer"? Understeer on entry is understandable, but "entry oversteer"?
Comes with an unstable rear axle. The back wants to swing round on the initial turn in. E.g. Locked rear axle would result in entry oversteer.
Basically the worst kind of oversteer as well. Exit is easier to control, but entry oversteer means the drive has no confidence turning into the corner so will either go in slower, or compromise his line to a more geometric shape with less steering variance.
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godlameroso
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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zibby43 wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 10:24
godlameroso wrote:
19 Nov 2020, 18:59
I'm not sold that Mercedes has the best chassis, the RB16 is faster in slow corners, implying more downforce. Especially in long sweeping corners that don't require much braking.
Slow corner performance isn't really about peak downforce. It's about mechanical grip and setup.

With respect to general chassis performance, Mercedes was fastest in all types of corners up until the engine mode TD.

An example from Spain 2020, which is obviously one of the benchmarks for a chassis, because of the various types of corners:

https://www.formula1.com/content/dam/fo ... /image.jpg

After the TD, Mercedes made compromises to their setup to trade off cornering speed for more pace in a straightline. There was a pretty good technical article about this (from FUnoAnalisiTecnica) which I posted in a thread on here a while back.

With the exception of 1 race, Mercedes has been the class of the field with respect to tire management this year, implying a tremendous amount of downforce. The more downforce you have, the more you flatten the tire and generate temperature evenly across the surface of the tread, which not only helps with performance, but with tire wear as well.

Finally, Mercedes stopped developing their car a while ago, while Red Bull has obviously forged on.

Downforce matters for every single corner except the Lowes hairpin in Monaco. Also don't forget how fast RB has developed their car. It's still entry oversteer, but the rear end is much more consistent than it used to be.

Downforce puts more load on the tire, and keeps the car from sliding if the aero is balanced, if it isn't then one axle will suffer more than the other.
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jjn9128
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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SiLo wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 14:54
jjn9128 wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 14:51
Moore77 wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 14:43
What exactly is "entry oversteer"? Understeer on entry is understandable, but "entry oversteer"?
Comes with an unstable rear axle. The back wants to swing round on the initial turn in. E.g. Locked rear axle would result in entry oversteer.
Basically the worst kind of oversteer as well. Exit is easier to control, but entry oversteer means the drive has no confidence turning into the corner so will either go in slower, or compromise his line to a more geometric shape with less steering variance.
Yeah exit oversteer can be controlled/tamed as it happens with the right foot.
godlameroso wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 15:06
[quote=zibby43 post_id=940182 time=<a href="tel:1606119884">1606119884</a> user_id=37123]
[quote=godlameroso post_id=939897 time=<a href="tel:1605805165">1605805165</a> user_id=9250]
I'm not sold that Mercedes has the best chassis, the RB16 is faster in slow corners, implying more downforce. Especially in long sweeping corners that don't require much braking.
Slow corner performance isn't really about peak downforce. It's about mechanical grip and setup.

With respect to general chassis performance, Mercedes was fastest in all types of corners up until the engine mode TD.

An example from Spain 2020, which is obviously one of the benchmarks for a chassis, because of the various types of corners:

https://www.formula1.com/content/dam/fo ... /image.jpg

After the TD, Mercedes made compromises to their setup to trade off cornering speed for more pace in a straightline. There was a pretty good technical article about this (from FUnoAnalisiTecnica) which I posted in a thread on here a while back.

With the exception of 1 race, Mercedes has been the class of the field with respect to tire management this year, implying a tremendous amount of downforce. The more downforce you have, the more you flatten the tire and generate temperature evenly across the surface of the tread, which not only helps with performance, but with tire wear as well.

Finally, Mercedes stopped developing their car a while ago, while Red Bull has obviously forged on.
[/quote]


Downforce matters for every single corner except the Lowes hairpin in Monaco. Also don't forget how fast RB has developed their car. It's still entry oversteer, but the rear end is much more consistent than it used to be.

Downforce puts more load on the tire, and keeps the car from sliding if the aero is balanced, if it isn't then one axle will suffer more than the other.
[/quote]

It was back in the 80s when Prost noted this as a driver. In the latest Kyle engineers (having just left merc) he estimates an f1 car performance in a corner. You can work back and the CzS is ~8.3 or Cz>5 depending on frontal area. That's exceeding the car weight at ~135kph/85mph.
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"There is one big friend. It is downforce. And once you have this it’s a big mate and it’s helping a lot." Robert Kubica

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godlameroso
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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To add to the previous point, McLaren has always been kind on its tires because the car is well balanced and easy to drive. The Renault is more difficult because they added oversteer. Whereas before, it too was a well balanced car that was easy to drive.
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Big Tea
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Re: Red Bull RB16

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Moore77 wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 14:43
godlameroso wrote:
23 Nov 2020, 05:37
Mugello Germany and Imola had the type of corners that aren't really penalized by having a bit of entry oversteer.
What exactly is "entry oversteer"? Understeer on entry is understandable, but "entry oversteer"?
I took it to mean that when the power was lifted off it upset the balance into less grip.
But as most here (should ) know, I am not big on handling technics
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