
no, as im sure the car isnt moving during a pit stopmcjamweasel wrote:Surely dropping the floor would fall foul of the movable aero regs?
Tech Regs
3.15 Aerodynamic influence :
With the exception of the cover described in Article 6.5.2 (when used in the pit lane), the driver adjustable bodywork described in Article 3.18 and the ducts described in Article 11.4, any specific part of the car influencing its aerodynamic performance :
- must comply with the rules relating to bodywork ;
must be rigidly secured to the entirely sprung part of the car (rigidly secured means not having any degree of freedom) ;
- must remain immobile in relation to the sprung part of the car.
Any device or construction that is designed to bridge the gap between the sprung part of the car and the ground is prohibited under all circumstances.
No part having an aerodynamic influence and no part of the bodywork, with the exception of the skid block in 3.13 above, may under any circumstances be located below the reference plane.
I do not see how the regulations prevent the car having two suspension systems working together. One for springing the other for levelling.ringo wrote:The construction has to be rigid, no degree of freedom while moving. So it has to be 1 single adjustment in the pits to last the race distance. The floor cannot be leveling off during the race.
I was going to mention the Lotus 88 on that one, but Pup beat me to it. You can't have a sprung and unsprung chassis like that, one being rigid and the other effectively acting as the suspension. In fact, so scared were Ferrari at the time of the Lotus 88 that Lotus were going to create a 'kart' that a regulation was added at Ferrari's behest that a car had to have a suspension. Weird.autogyro wrote:I do not see how the regulations prevent the car having two suspension systems working together. One for springing the other for levelling.
It's like the early eighties all over again. The problem is that I'm pretty sure that the car has already risen to the required height after qualifying and as it stops at parc ferme, certainly from the pictures I've seen. Thus, nothing would be altered in parc ferme on the car at all until the race actually starts so they wouldn't fall foul of that rule.Pup wrote:The best theory I've seen is that the car is lowered via gas struts which slowly leak, allowing the car to rise to race height while in parc ferme overnight.
And your point is... ?99cent wrote:Virgin @Circuito Permanente de Jerez - 10-02-2010
How would it lower itself back during the race then?Pup wrote:The sprung floor trick has been tried and outlawed. Lotus 88.
The best theory I've seen is that the car is lowered via gas struts which slowly leak, allowing the car to rise to race height while in parc ferme overnight.
There is no need to bleed off gas and the system would look little different from any current one. All the basic work was done at Lotus in the late 1980s and kept from use by the banning of the 88.Pandamasque wrote:And your point is... ?99cent wrote:Virgin @Circuito Permanente de Jerez - 10-02-2010How would it lower itself back during the race then?Pup wrote:The sprung floor trick has been tried and outlawed. Lotus 88.
The best theory I've seen is that the car is lowered via gas struts which slowly leak, allowing the car to rise to race height while in parc ferme overnight.
How about raising the car with the gas, i.e. refilling it before the race and let it leak during the race lowering the car as the it goes light. I read somewhere that refilling gases before the race is allowed.
I wouldn't think that it does. RB seem to have the same relative pace as the others throughout the race. If they were lowering their car during the race, then you'd think that we'd see their relative pace slowly increase.Pandamasque wrote:How would it lower itself back during the race then?Pup wrote:The best theory I've seen is that the car is lowered via gas struts which slowly leak, allowing the car to rise to race height while in parc ferme overnight.
How about raising the car with the gas, i.e. refilling it before the race and let it leak during the race lowering the car as the it goes light. I read somewhere that refilling gases before the race is allowed.