marcush. wrote:I think the tunnel thingy does help Webber only when Vettel seem to have difficulty to exploit the potential.
So will they have to develop in two directions for the rest of the season?
It looks more and more like all the exhaust coanda thingies do not really net enough performance for the effort you are investing..that´s sidepod config no ?? and still not the solution...
The tunnel isn't really a characteristic problem in terms of driving IMO. It's that the tunnel is choking - an aero, technical problem. CFD and windtunnel is saying that the tunnel should work and feed the coke bottle, but track is showing the tunnel chokes. Both drivers are faster with no tunnel. (see Bahrain)
bhallg2k wrote:I don't think their "tunnel" exhaust works, at least not the way they want it to. The aim of that configuration is to seal the diffuser by using the much-vaunted Coanda effect to direct air flow around the chassis through the "tunnels" so that it doesn't diffuse the exhaust plume before it gets to the edge of the diffuser.
You're confusing 2 things - the tunnel is a system to get the sidepod undercut flow into the coke bottle region, while the coanda exhaust directs the air just over the top over the sidepods.
See here:
http://scarbsf1.wordpress.com/2012/04/2 ... -analysis/
The problem, I think, is that it only works while the driver is on the throttle, and even then it's likely nowhere near as effective as anything seen on last year's cars. So, what you've got then is, essentially, a system that destabilizes the car while adding a little benefit.
Thing is same can be said about every non-neutral exhaust setup. Such as the McLaren one.
As we've all seen over the years, Webber is much better than Vettel with iffy balance. Hence their relative performance in qualifying today. Vettel is pretty much handicapped by the fact that, for whatever reason, he can't drive around the "tunnel" system's instability. That's why he doesn't use it.
Neither did Webber AFAIK. I think it's not that Webber is better with iffy balance - but rather both deal better with opposing imbalances. Webber seems to handle understeer better, Vettel seems to handle oversteer better. Oftentimes we see them both running with cars that can be quite different - Webber with a bit more understeer, Vettel with a bit more oversteer.
A big part of the current balance in power between the two drivers IMO is the lack of off-throttle blowing. Since China 2010 Webber has always better managed a car that is throttle-sensitive in terms of downforce. See here:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/motorsp ... 127533.stm
In its initial form, this component required a very specific driving technique to maximise the time on open throttle - which increased the downforce boost from the exhaust plume - and Webber was superb at it, consistently squeezing just that little bit more from it than his team-mate.
Vettel continued to be better at living with a little bit of entry oversteer, and that ability to adapt to the car moving around him was maybe partly why he was not as insistent on adapting his technique to a feature that calmed the rear end as soon as you got on the throttle.