No no, get rid of those rediculous upright radiators. Cante them forward like normal human beings right.
Sauber has announced that it will launch its 2013 F1 car, the C32-Ferrari, at the start of next month. The successor to the very credible C31 will be revealed at the team's Swiss base in Hinwil on February 2nd with the outfit's new drivers, Nico Hulkenberg and Esteban Gutierrez pulling back the covers just after mid-day. Sauber team principal Monisha Kaltenborn, chief designer Matt Morris and reserve driver Robin Frijns will also be in attendance and the event will be streamed live via the squad's official website. Sauber is the third team to set a launch date for its new car, following on from McLaren and Force India.
In the normal world yes but no one writes off a season in today's F1. Given the testing restrictions there may be some either/or that will trend to the 2014 car later on this year (depending on the championship standings). The one thing that won't be an issue is money. At least not at Ferrari.
MP4-28 will have pullrod front suspension and a high nose. Mclaren have stated they are going for 'revolution' rather than an evolution of Mp4-27. Count on a ramp/tunnel exhaust system as well if they are going completely bananas.
That is precisely how I heard it as well. others probably did the same thing, especially Ferrari and Mclaren. Ferrari probably ceased or compromised developing certain aspects of F2013 in the interest of further developing F2012 for Fernando and second place in the WCC. Mclaren seem to know how to deal with this sort of thing better though.
It is very interesting that Red Bull are the only ones to admit right now, how the 2012 title chase affected the 13 development pace.
In the end it probably won't effect either of them very much. Both have stellar in-season development. Any potential major design flaw they notice now is already too late to be fixed anyway.
I was told it was just after Brazil that they mentioned something to that effect. There is a source floating around somewhere. As usual though, this is probably idle conjecture at best but with sound logic. They were certainly right about RB8 being behind the 8-ball last year as it was quite the handful for several races.
Rory has had some input on the car, I've been told. How much? I don't know. Additionally, I've heard there is some squabbling going on regarding the direction of the design of the front end. It's no different than what I heard about the front end of the F2012 pre-season. A friend of mine in Maranello told me they feel much more confident about the new car than they did about the F2012, but he told me the same thing about the 'F150'. So, who knows?
"Very interesting" as they say...... I'm not sure how much real input he can have operating the way it appears he is - He bowls in to the design office and waves some magic Rory-dust around then takes off? Indeed. Squabbling? At Ferrari? Say it ain't so! Two design teams, + Pat + Rory + Nick T + Stefano sounds like it could be a recipe for disaster to me sitting here in the peanut gallery...... Cheers, Ian
Hear anything in regards to something new with the W04 Mercedes? We know about the rear suspension being 'relaxed'.
To add a bit of context to this thread I think this article by Gary Anderson for the BBC is very interesting: http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/20844843 Good quote:
Join Twitter and follow Lewis Hamilton's posts. WHo know we might see pics of the new car in production too
From BBC: http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/20898956 Newey: "If I'm honest, this has compromised the timescales of the new car more than we would have liked," he said. "It was the right trade at the time, because we managed to get the job done but it means a busy winter trying to catch up again."
I think the Mclaren and Mercedes 2013 contenders will be nearly identical cars. RB style tunnel and ramp exhausts, pullrod front suspension, only the Mercedes W04 rear suspension is supposedly arranged in a way that its geometry can be changed in a hurry and in multiple ways if needed. Here's the kicker for W04 though as I see things, suspension. With W03s aerodynamics being what they were last year, it was an utter miracle they won in China and took pole in Monaco by far having the quickest car there. Monaco is where mechanical grip really comes into play, and W03s suspension system was such that it provided gobs more mechanical grip than any car on the field which is why even with worse aero it was so much quicker than anyone else at Monaco. I expect W04 to be a further development of this only hopefullly with more aero. I expect Ferrari, Mclaren at the very minimum to follow suit with Mercedes in how Mercedes interconnect diagonally and front to back the suspension system. Brilliant stuff, and that ladies and gentlemen is the future of F1 suspensions.
That's the one. But again, I simply cannot give it much stock as the Red Bull and Ferrari teams also have magic wand factories next to their F1 facilities. Even if they're somewhat behind I have no doubt they can make the car competitive within 5-6 races given their resources.
F1 pixie dust as it were. It poses some interesting questions. Is design so constrained that you can't go too far wrong? How far past the point of diminishing returns have we gone? Are they just nibbling at the edges? Tweaking the last .001%? And for the philosophical. If no design is beyond redemption can any be truly transcendent?
You're getting a bit deep here, I like it. A new era of potential avante garde machines could be born I suppose, but realistically I believe it's the minor nuances of the very top contenders which indeed make them competitive. It seems that the design of a top modern F1 machine need only be 97% that of a top other contender as that other 3% can be made up with further in-season development. Has this laxed design? That 97% is always on a sliding scale. The silver curtain can never be seen through until unveiled, so IMO no, specifically because no team knows what the other is completely up to, they just know what they are limited to which is probably why nothing will be truly transendent again. And my definition of a truly transcendent mind-altering machine would be consistently 1.5 seconds quicker than the field at all times. It's blatantly obvious the difference in quality between a Marussia and a Mclaren, but splitting hairs between Mclaren and RB you are indeed correct in that they are going for that .001% none of us can see minus access to the respective team's computational fluid dynamics program models. Man's brain is usually limited to what is directly in front of it, or immersed in such as F1 engineers are. Let's get a group of creative Boeing engineers and see what they can come up with, how's that for a different kind of thinking. If nothing else, it would be an excellent think-tank type design study with ideas from those who are indeed engineers but know nothing specific to F1. Engineers who work in much higher mach numbers would probably have a completely altered slant on what a F1 (low mach) car would appear.