Breaking news..........
- BiggestNizzy
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As far as I was aware and I expect to be corrected flexible panels have been banned for jonks I remember looking it up as I came cam up with aan idea of flexible wings that would give high downforce at lower speeds and reduced downforce at high speeds, but someone had though it first and banned itLawrence wrote: This year Ferrari started the year and won the first race with a flexible floor, they claimed it was alright due to the way the FIA measured the deflection of the floor which is exactly what BAR claimed when they were banned for 2 races with their petrol tank, it was correct the way the FIA measured the cars.
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Most of you will not remember as I do, Max Mosely's infamous father, Sir Oswald Mosley, former leader of the British Union of Fascists, in the 30's and 40's.
"His second wife Diana, whom he had married in 1936 in the presence of Hitler and Goebbels, was also interned, shortly after the birth of their son Max; they lived together for most of the war in a house in the grounds of Holloway prison."
Some family, but good to see that he is following in his fathers footsteps..........
tut
"His second wife Diana, whom he had married in 1936 in the presence of Hitler and Goebbels, was also interned, shortly after the birth of their son Max; they lived together for most of the war in a house in the grounds of Holloway prison."
Some family, but good to see that he is following in his fathers footsteps..........
tut
Moveable aero devices and aero devices that act directly on the unsprung wheels (as opposed to the chassis) are banned (orginally due to the dangerous failures of the high strut wings introduced in the 60s).... yet all the teams run aero wishbones too now.BiggestNizzy wrote:As far as I was aware and I expect to be corrected flexible panels have been banned for jonks I remember looking it up as I came cam up with aan idea of flexible wings that would give high downforce at lower speeds and reduced downforce at high speeds, but someone had though it first and banned itLawrence wrote: This year Ferrari started the year and won the first race with a flexible floor, they claimed it was alright due to the way the FIA measured the deflection of the floor which is exactly what BAR claimed when they were banned for 2 races with their petrol tank, it was correct the way the FIA measured the cars.
But it's very puzzling how they have not nipped Ferrari's front wheel discs in the bud.
..I think I'd be pleased to see Belestre come back. Mosley has systematically worked against the 'sport' for too long

- BiggestNizzy
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Yawn got bored reading.shooomer wrote:http://www.fia.com/resources/documents/ ... 130907.pdf
not read it but was told to start at para 3.9
How did Ferrari find out about these emails ?
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- BiggestNizzy
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They couldn't punish the drivers because they had given them immunity in exchange for revealing any relevant information they had. In other circumstances they would have.
Interesting that Alonso/De La Rosa had something to reveal and Hamilton didn't (or chose not to reveal anything he may have had).
The whole thing smells. I am a McLaren fan, but I must admit that they haven't handled this one well. If they had acted firmly and more swiftly they could perhaps have avoided this one.
It's made worse by the fact that previously Ferrari has been found to be "cheating" and hasn't been punished.
100m$ is a lot of money. As Lawrence observed, it isn't stated where the Formula One Management Limited money that would have been due to McLaren will now go, but my bet is that it will be distributed amongst the remaining teams, either pro-rata with their entitlement, or more likely they'll all just get bumped up the scale, so Ferrari will get P1/P2 money provided they finish P3/P4.
McLaren don't really have the option of withdrawing from the series, but it must be tempting to do so anyway!
Cheers,
Robin
Interesting that Alonso/De La Rosa had something to reveal and Hamilton didn't (or chose not to reveal anything he may have had).
The whole thing smells. I am a McLaren fan, but I must admit that they haven't handled this one well. If they had acted firmly and more swiftly they could perhaps have avoided this one.
It's made worse by the fact that previously Ferrari has been found to be "cheating" and hasn't been punished.
100m$ is a lot of money. As Lawrence observed, it isn't stated where the Formula One Management Limited money that would have been due to McLaren will now go, but my bet is that it will be distributed amongst the remaining teams, either pro-rata with their entitlement, or more likely they'll all just get bumped up the scale, so Ferrari will get P1/P2 money provided they finish P3/P4.
McLaren don't really have the option of withdrawing from the series, but it must be tempting to do so anyway!
Cheers,
Robin
I is in your loomz nibblin ur wirez
#bemoretut
#bemoretut
Movable aero is still there - wings flex under load but there are pretty strict tolerances for it. Wishbones must be aerodynamically neutral, apart from a little bit on the inboard end of the rears IIRC, which falls outside the regulated wishbone area.jasonliddell wrote:Moveable aero devices and aero devices that act directly on the unsprung wheels (as opposed to the chassis) are banned (orginally due to the dangerous failures of the high strut wings introduced in the 60s).... yet all the teams run aero wishbones too now.BiggestNizzy wrote:As far as I was aware and I expect to be corrected flexible panels have been banned for jonks I remember looking it up as I came cam up with aan idea of flexible wings that would give high downforce at lower speeds and reduced downforce at high speeds, but someone had though it first and banned itLawrence wrote: This year Ferrari started the year and won the first race with a flexible floor, they claimed it was alright due to the way the FIA measured the deflection of the floor which is exactly what BAR claimed when they were banned for 2 races with their petrol tank, it was correct the way the FIA measured the cars.
But it's very puzzling how they have not nipped Ferrari's front wheel discs in the bud.
..I think I'd be pleased to see Belestre come back. Mosley has systematically worked against the 'sport' for too long
Giorgio Piola does fantastic books that detail all the wee features on the cars after each season. Beautifully illustrated (he's the guy that does the illustrations in Autosport for F1 stuff) they are worth getting just as coffee table books, but they are full of 'ah, so that's what it's for' moments too

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1990 Honda VFR400 NC30
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2000 Kawasaki ZX-7R
Just what I was thinking too, tut.tut wrote:Most of you will not remember as I do, Max Mosely's infamous father, Sir Oswald Mosley, former leader of the British Union of Fascists, in the 30's and 40's.
"His second wife Diana, whom he had married in 1936 in the presence of Hitler and Goebbels, was also interned, shortly after the birth of their son Max; they lived together for most of the war in a house in the grounds of Holloway prison."
Some family, but good to see that he is following in his fathers footsteps..........
tut
Mosley was the leader of the British Blackshirts who were kind of modelled on the Italian Blackshirts, Mussolini's fascist henchmen.

Yep. I'm a big fan of Piola's drawings... great skills - and enhanced with Gary Anderson's comments these days too. Didn't know there was a dedicated book of his drawings - got a link?Shug wrote:Movable aero is still there - wings flex under load but there are pretty strict tolerances for it. Wishbones must be aerodynamically neutral, apart from a little bit on the inboard end of the rears IIRC, which falls outside the regulated wishbone area.jasonliddell wrote:Moveable aero devices and aero devices that act directly on the unsprung wheels (as opposed to the chassis) are banned (orginally due to the dangerous failures of the high strut wings introduced in the 60s).... yet all the teams run aero wishbones too now.BiggestNizzy wrote: As far as I was aware and I expect to be corrected flexible panels have been banned for jonks I remember looking it up as I came cam up with aan idea of flexible wings that would give high downforce at lower speeds and reduced downforce at high speeds, but someone had though it first and banned it
But it's very puzzling how they have not nipped Ferrari's front wheel discs in the bud.
..I think I'd be pleased to see Belestre come back. Mosley has systematically worked against the 'sport' for too long
Giorgio Piola does fantastic books that detail all the wee features on the cars after each season. Beautifully illustrated (he's the guy that does the illustrations in Autosport for F1 stuff) they are worth getting just as coffee table books, but they are full of 'ah, so that's what it's for' moments too

But IMHO the grey area with the wishbones is that they're not quite 'aero neutral' in the purist sense... they condition - and, crucially, *redicrect* - the airflow specifically to help other bodywork generate downforce - especially when they've been shruded in further bodywork.
but then it's a grey area I guess


From F1.com:-
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FIA President Max Mosley has revealed how Formula One racing’s governing body plans to spend the proceeds from McLaren’s record $100 million fine.
If Mosley has his way, McLaren’s rivals will receive a portion of the money, with the rest distributed among national motorsport authorities to help fund young driver programmes.
“Roughly half of it will go to the other teams, the other half we’re going - if the World Council agrees - to distribute to our ASNs worldwide to bring on young drivers,â€
++++++++++++++
FIA President Max Mosley has revealed how Formula One racing’s governing body plans to spend the proceeds from McLaren’s record $100 million fine.
If Mosley has his way, McLaren’s rivals will receive a portion of the money, with the rest distributed among national motorsport authorities to help fund young driver programmes.
“Roughly half of it will go to the other teams, the other half we’re going - if the World Council agrees - to distribute to our ASNs worldwide to bring on young drivers,â€
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