I don't understand the connection. The phase change isn't going to cause any wheel deceleration. It's not an E&M phenomenon.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑09 May 2025, 21:52
For it to absorb heat and then dissapate, it’s essentially dynamic braking that’s been around on railroad locomotives for 80 years.
What does Red Bull need to "call out" and why? Is PCM illegal? What they have shown is this:Hoffman900 wrote: ↑09 May 2025, 21:52What a thermal imaging camera would also show, is where that is being dissapated and would be east for RB to call out. They haven’t done so. Last I recall, any form of dynamic braking on the front axle is illegal anyway.
The "brake vents" are the inlets and the outlets. It would suggest very cool brakes, somehow, or some kind of isolation or storage of the heat from the brake disc.According to AMuS, the team has turned to thermal imaging cameras to capture the temperature of the tyre cooling ducts on the MCL39 when the drivers come in for their pit stops with the focus primarily on the rear tyres as they generally overheat more quickly than the fronts.
The German publication claims Red Bull have noted ‘many blue areas around the brake vents on the McLaren tyres, while all the other cars showed a lot of orange and red’ with the team coming to the conclusion that it is ‘impossible’ to cool the tyres that well with just air alone.
https://www.planetf1.com/news/thermal-c ... en-mystery
The argument doesn't depend on whether an F1 team invented it or they found someone that makes the materials. The first video suggest that B Pillar Sport youtube owner wrote a masters thesis on a phase changing material for Mclaren. So it is possible. There are other sources where you can look. It's not vaporware.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑09 May 2025, 21:52Everyone can claim to “design a fluid” or “use a material”. But what are these materials? Call some specific ones out. F1 very rarely if ever has “invented” their own materials, usually stealing commercially available materials from aerospace (it’s only exotic in the sense joe public has never heard of it). Would be even less likely in the cost cap era.
https://www.i-tes.eu/it/blog/4/i-materi ... alore.html