I've made a small analysis on this topic in my blog:
http://technicalf1explained.blogspot.co ... noses.html

Also, can anyone remember a team using a pelican nose prior to Renault in 2009?
i know that the 2d cfd is not accurate, as i have already stated, but i think that your comment ''in no way representative'' is too harsh as if you cut the car in the middle, it would be very similar (in shape) to that... the effect they are trying to achieve is the same...and i think that the reason it is shallower at the sides is so that the CoP stays balanced as the bulge is obstructing air that would otherwise have a clear path towards the back of the car and that is the reason they are running with the high noses as i am sure you know... air can still flow more easily to the back next to the front wing pylons while in the middle they get the 'Pelican Nose effect'... The reason i have not included this in my post is because i am not entirely sure about it...wesley123 wrote:I dont think the cfd showed is in no way representitive of what is done here. First of all, it is a 2D show, which tries to apply to a 3D shape. Therefore I dont think it applies to this, it applies to the force India bump and the one of the 2009 Renault. But what is done here is vastly different.
What is done here is something similar to what the 90s Bennetons ran, which had a rounded underside of the nosecone/tub. I have read somewhere about it's advantages, but I dont remember what they were. But I believe the same applies to these pelican noses.
I think they are trying to achieve the same as with the regular chin, but I believe it's effect is more efficient i.e. less draggy compared to what FI did.amouzouris wrote:i know that the 2d cfd is not accurate, as i have already stated, but i think that your comment ''in no way representative'' is too harsh as if you cut the car in the middle, it would be very similar (in shape) to that... the effect they are trying to achieve is the same...and i think that the reason it is shallower at the sides is so that the CoP stays balanced as the bulge is obstructing air that would otherwise have a clear path towards the back of the car and that is the reason they are running with the high noses as i am sure you know... air can still flow more easily to the back next to the front wing pylons while in the middle they get the 'Pelican Nose effect'... The reason i have not included this in my post is because i am not entirely sure about it...wesley123 wrote:I dont think the cfd showed is in no way representitive of what is done here. First of all, it is a 2D show, which tries to apply to a 3D shape. Therefore I dont think it applies to this, it applies to the force India bump and the one of the 2009 Renault. But what is done here is vastly different.
What is done here is something similar to what the 90s Bennetons ran, which had a rounded underside of the nosecone/tub. I have read somewhere about it's advantages, but I dont remember what they were. But I believe the same applies to these pelican noses.
Dragonfly wrote:As far as I remember Benetton's were not like a bump but gradually sloped down. The resemblance I see is in the shape of the of the front side - smooth curve. But the Benetton on the picture is a pre 94 car with different underbody aero. IIRC the exhaust pipes exited right in the diffuser. The high nose as far as memory goes was an innovation under Tom Walkinshaw.