2011 F1 car concepts

A place to discuss the characteristics of the cars in Formula One, both current as well as historical. Laptimes, driver worshipping and team chatter do not belong here.
Tamburello
Tamburello
0
Joined: 29 Sep 2010, 14:52
Location: Sydney, Australia.

Re: 2011 cars

Post

myurr wrote:
Martin Keene wrote:I don't understand why people have a problem with the adjustable rear wing, what's the difference between it and an f duct?
Because the F-Duct is freely available to all to use however they see fit. The adjustable rear wing is only activated when a driver is within 1 second of the car in front, giving them an artificial speed boost and taking away some of the skill required to overtake.

Instead of fixing the problem of cars being unable to overtake on track (tyres that are too grippy and consistent, cars that are too stable and aero dependent making, brakes that are too powerful thus reducing braking distances, etc.) they have chosen this artificial bandage to try and cover up for the fact that the current regulations are processional racing.
Okay allow me put this question out: is restricting technology - e.g. by reducing aero dependency of cars, making tyres less grippy and consistent, banning driver aids, changing track layouts to suit a particular type of race - also not a form of artificiality?

donskar
donskar
2
Joined: 03 Feb 2007, 16:41
Location: Cardboard box, end of Boulevard of Broken Dreams

Re: 2011 cars

Post

Tumbarello wrote:
myurr wrote:
Martin Keene wrote:I don't understand why people have a problem with the adjustable rear wing, what's the difference between it and an f duct?
Because the F-Duct is freely available to all to use however they see fit. The adjustable rear wing is only activated when a driver is within 1 second of the car in front, giving them an artificial speed boost and taking away some of the skill required to overtake.

Instead of fixing the problem of cars being unable to overtake on track (tyres that are too grippy and consistent, cars that are too stable and aero dependent making, brakes that are too powerful thus reducing braking distances, etc.) they have chosen this artificial bandage to try and cover up for the fact that the current regulations are processional racing.
Okay allow me put this question out: is restricting technology - e.g. by reducing aero dependency of cars, making tyres less grippy and consistent, banning driver aids, changing track layouts to suit a particular type of race - also not a form of artificiality?
Good point, Tumbarello. We love the sport and sometimes blind ourselves to the artificiality you mention. Take "green." If all F1 cars had wind-up rubber band motors, would the environment be measurably improved? No. Why should $15,000 production cars have LOTS of technology banned in F1? On aero, though: I'd like the F1 tech powers that be take a good look at road cars and try to set F1 aero regs that emulate what the public can buy -- underbody aero, movable rear flap, but not all the silly appendages. (I know, there are fewer now, but still too many.)
Enzo Ferrari was a great man. But he was not a good man. -- Phil Hill

ak07
ak07
0
Joined: 17 Feb 2010, 19:37

Re: 2011 cars

Post

Personally I think the fact that "new" technologies are banned quickly after their introduction is actually beneficial to road-car technology.

The fact that new developments are banned is, in my opinion, one of the largest reasons new developments are engineered.

The rear wing flap "brace" that is now required after Ferrari was stalling their rear wing by the flex of the flap led to a larger importance to develop something new, aka the f-duct.

The fact that active-suspension was banned could be argued as a large reason why Renault and Michelin developed the mass-damper. In turn, the banning of the mass damper could be argued as a reason to develop inerters (J-Damper)

So on and so forth.

The fact is these technologies are usually already either on the drawing boards, being tested or at least being thought of by car manufacturer's. Formula One is only a place for them to be tried and the general idea be proven. After that the difference in the development if it was to be continually refined in Formula One or if it was banned wouldn't change much. Continued development in racing wouldn't benefit car manufacturer's as the engineering needed to convert a technology from F1 to the street benefits more from "proof of concept" than from the small refined and very specific engineering developments made specifically for Formula One.

User avatar
Intego
10
Joined: 01 Apr 2010, 16:35

Re: 2011 cars

Post

lolzi wrote:[...]
Well, not compared to "engine mappers" at least :lol: will these guys be onboard? Maybe RB7 will be (as far as I know) the world's first F1 3-seater!
Well, not the first one ... :mrgreen:
Image
Image
Image
Image
The last one has his own thread on f1technical! :lol:
"Posts targeted only at expressing favouritism or dislike towards people are treated as spam. They can hence be deleted without notice and could invoke a warning to the poster." f1technical forum rules

gridwalker
gridwalker
7
Joined: 27 Mar 2009, 12:22
Location: Sheffield, UK

Re: 2011 cars

Post

Intego wrote:Image
I know all of them except this one : who made it?
"Change is inevitable, except from a vending machine ..."

Jersey Tom
Jersey Tom
166
Joined: 29 May 2006, 20:49
Location: Huntersville, NC

Re: 2011 cars

Post

ak07 wrote:Personally I think the fact that "new" technologies are banned quickly after their introduction is actually beneficial to road-car technology.

The fact that new developments are banned is, in my opinion, one of the largest reasons new developments are engineered.

The rear wing flap "brace" that is now required after Ferrari was stalling their rear wing by the flex of the flap led to a larger importance to develop something new, aka the f-duct.

The fact that active-suspension was banned could be argued as a large reason why Renault and Michelin developed the mass-damper. In turn, the banning of the mass damper could be argued as a reason to develop inerters (J-Damper)

So on and so forth.

The fact is these technologies are usually already either on the drawing boards, being tested or at least being thought of by car manufacturer's. Formula One is only a place for them to be tried and the general idea be proven. After that the difference in the development if it was to be continually refined in Formula One or if it was banned wouldn't change much. Continued development in racing wouldn't benefit car manufacturer's as the engineering needed to convert a technology from F1 to the street benefits more from "proof of concept" than from the small refined and very specific engineering developments made specifically for Formula One.
Eh. Don't agree. As I'm fond of saving.. lot technology is generally developed OUTSIDE of racing first. Racing doesn't exist as a proving ground.

The whole racing/road relevance line is purely PR BS. Granted there are exceptions.. but it's not typical.
Grip is a four letter word. All opinions are my own and not those of current or previous employers.

User avatar
Intego
10
Joined: 01 Apr 2010, 16:35

Re: 2011 cars

Post

gridwalker wrote:
Intego wrote:Image
I know all of them except this one : who made it?
Found it on a well known search engine while searching for the Ferrari and the Renault. Seems to be especially built for Dubai tourists or so.

But I als found this
Image
http://www.adventuresportsholidays.com/ ... -17292.php

and this #-o
Image
"Posts targeted only at expressing favouritism or dislike towards people are treated as spam. They can hence be deleted without notice and could invoke a warning to the poster." f1technical forum rules

User avatar
raymondu999
54
Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 07:31

Re: 2011 cars

Post

Actually here's a thought. Which cars do you reckon will be most/least disadvantaged due to no ddd and f-duct next year? I'm thinking that Macca with their ginormous mammoth humongous diffuser will be suffering because of that and probably they'll have to pretty much go clean sheet. Something like the RB6 or F10 on the other hand seems to be more focused on airflow around the chassis, no?
失败者找理由,成功者找方法

lotus7
lotus7
1
Joined: 13 Feb 2010, 16:23

Re: 2011 cars

Post

Intego wrote:
Image
Brilliant !! then all the fan boys and did he/would he/could he/should he conspirators can ride with on qualifying/race day and give us the real reason for the crash/take out a competitor opinions that are so rife on this technical forum

On second thoughts , I suppose the same posters will still argue their opinions #-o

User avatar
raymondu999
54
Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 07:31

Re: 2011 cars

Post

ever so slightly off topic here. But a friend of mine told me that next year the sharkfin isn't allowed to attach to the rear wing. Even if there's no f-duct, kind of the early iterations of the RB5. Can anyone confirm or debunk this? I was under the impression that the major aero changes were just the two devices everyone hated - the f-duct and also the DDD. What does everyone think about these two bannings? Which cars will they hurt the most/least? :mrgreen:
失败者找理由,成功者找方法

User avatar
djos
113
Joined: 19 May 2006, 06:09
Location: Melbourne, Australia

Re: 2011 cars

Post

Jersey Tom wrote:I know I've said it many times, and I hate to repeat myself, but I still think the whole green racing concept is a crock. Race cars have never been, and will never need to be relevant to passenger cars. The whole notion of making a road-relevant single seat, open-wheel vehicle.. seems a little silly.

I'd also argue that the majority of the time, racing is not the birthplace if innovative new technologies. These technologies (fuel injection, radial tires, aerodynamics, microhydraulics, etc) are birthed in the consumer and commercial industries, and only applied in novel ways to racecars. The R&D budgets for consumer and commercial markets puts any race team to shame. As of a few years ago I want to say Ford's R&D budget was on the order of $8 billion, and that's just one OEM.

In any event, if there's a driver-controlled rear wing thing.. sounds like a gimmick to me. Trying to slap a band-aid over a severed arm.
+1 Million!
"In downforce we trust"

User avatar
machin
162
Joined: 25 Nov 2008, 14:45

Re: 2011 cars

Post

Jersey Tom wrote:I know I've said it many times, and I hate to repeat myself, but I still think the whole green racing concept is a crock. Race cars have never been, and will never need to be relevant to passenger cars. The whole notion of making a road-relevant single seat, open-wheel vehicle.. seems a little silly.
Its a good point, but if F1 appears to the outside, every-day-person to be a big waste of money/earth's resources/green house emissions then it WILL lose the support of the sponsors and manufacturers.... As none of them wants to be associated with wasteful-ness. No big sponsors means you can say good-bye to all of the high technology/development etc that we all love about the sport....

You can bury your head in the sand about the green-issue but the smart players are jumping on-board so that we can continue to have our fun... no matter what the reality actually is -its all about perception to the outside world.
COMPETITION CAR ENGINEERING -Home of VIRTUAL STOPWATCH

CMSMJ1
CMSMJ1
Moderator
Joined: 25 Sep 2007, 10:51
Location: Chesterfield, United Kingdom

Re: 2011 cars

Post

@ machin - you reckon our friends in China are jumping on the green bandwagon too?

Green = BS :?

F1 will be cool next year and as long as people want to race fast cars there will be F1. The commercial aspect doens't go hand in hand. It might get cheaper, might get to smaller budgets...but the core of people trying to go faster than the next will still eb there.

I expect faster cars again next year, as every year.. :mrgreen:
IMPERATOR REX ANGLORUM

autogyro
autogyro
53
Joined: 04 Oct 2009, 15:03

Re: 2011 cars

Post

There has never been faster cars every year, just cars designed for a new set of regulations. That is not primary development, it is controlled.

User avatar
raymondu999
54
Joined: 04 Feb 2010, 07:31

Re: 2011 cars

Post

CMSMJ1 wrote:@ machin - you reckon our friends in China are jumping on the green bandwagon too?
And what, pray tell, is that supposed to mean?
失败者找理由,成功者找方法