sucof wrote: ↑03 Aug 2025, 22:41
SB15 wrote: ↑03 Aug 2025, 22:27
AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Aug 2025, 22:13
I think that all of the drivers are emotional. This is not the problem at Ferrari. The problem is the SF25 and Fred has been selling fairy tales about it's potential since day 1. This season would have been like 2020 or 2021 if they ran at an appropriate ride height to stop the plank wear. Fred would not have been renewed. Now you understand why he spent all year blaming the drivers and pointing to this fictitious "potential" which only appears when the car is running too low.
So the car's main problem is because of the limitations going double Pull-rod, since the pull-rod on the front allows for better airflow while also bringing the car closer to the ground at high speed, if you have too much downforce then you run into an issue with plank wear because the car would look it's on rails but is actually scraping the plank because there's not enough "stalling" with the Pull-rod in the rear. The reason why many teams switched to the Push-rod for the rear. (
Mercedes did a hybrid for the rear suspension, where their push-rod lowers the car like a Pull-rod while stalling at a certain height, Merc could've been really quick if they switched to pull-rod on the front but they may carry over the current concept for next year)
If other teams went as low as Ferrari does, Ferrari would be completely uncompetitive on pure pace vs Mclaren, Mercedes, & Redbull.
If you would have the real knowledge of an engineer, you would never write all these...
You suggest, that all these simple things and knowledge eludes the engineers of the entire Mercedes and Ferrari F1 team? LOL
Also this pull rod vs push rod nonsense is so laughable... this is like the loch ness monster which still exists in the minds of such "believers"... people start point at them whatever happens, like they are the great differentiators... Please stop this nonsense.
Why do I have to stop with the nonsense if this is the reason for the plank wear, after Austin 23 for Mercedes, their wasn't many reports from the drivers of "Plank wear" or bouncing after Mercedes changed the suspension.
You have to be naive to just say to yourself and say that "you don't know what you're talking about because you're not an engineer because your analogy is basically simple minded". There was literally zero reason for Ferrari to change basically 99% of the car when theirs a whole regulation change happening next year...
That to me what you said was a cop out because Ferrari does know that the rear suspension cannot keep the rear from being too low to the ground because their floor possibly generates soo much downforce. The pull-rod functions as it's name imply, to pull the car down, and since the ground effect cars are more dependent on the floor, having a pull-rod rather than a push-rod gives you more problems that even you can admit. Why do you think they made some type of change to the rear suspension? To avoid plank wear because they do know that they made a bad choice by not changing their rear suspension.
You made the justification that "pushrod vs pull-rod" is nonsense, why do you think Adrian Newey went with pull-rod in the front and push in rear? And Mclaren went with that same philosophy, turns out it's not nonsense.