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#2 |
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#3 |
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Doubt it though I could be wrong. McLaren has the contemporary design. Another team has there's directed more at the floor rather than into the diffuser. |
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#9 |
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#10 |
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I think they may still have asymmetric exhaust outlets. They definitely had it before the blown diffuser modification. |
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#11 |
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It is entirely possible it is one or both of the following; I found this technical PDF that looks at all the F1 Season 2010 - Aerodynamic & Mechanical Updates - Version 3 Updated 7th June 2010 includes blown diffusers, very informative and interesting. http://www.f1-forecast.com/index.php...id=161&lang=en ..though I think we wil have to wait for version 4 to see details of the latest McLaren updates. |
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#12 |
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This is something that Pat Symonds wrote about in F1 Racing over a month ago. While he was at Renault they worked on it but could not get it to work reliably.
He reckons that Red Bull already have some such system on the RB6 only the engine not change is not as pronounced as on the RB6. There were quite a few in pitlane that noticed the RBR possibility quite a few months ago - hence this is Mclaren following the RBR lead. I reckon it is a form of traction control but there is a loophole because TC is banned as a controlling of the rear wheels directly - not throttle-ignition. |
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This is something that Pat Symonds wrote about in F1 Racing over a month ago. While he was at Renault they worked on it but could not get it to work reliably. |
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#19 |
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Ignition retardation? That would melt the exhausts unless McLaren found something with the ECU?
http://scarbsf1.wordpress.com/2010/0...teams-q3-pace/ Of course this gain doesn’t come for free, the heat of combustion now takes place in the exhaust port, so that the exhaust valve, cylinder head and exhaust pipe all suffer excessive heat. This will affect them, as they cannot withstand this sort of thermal load for long periods. Equally the process burns additional fuel, in the race this is a negative thing as fuel is limited and no refuelling is allowed. |
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#20 |
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We may be at cross purposes here, but I read somewhere - of course, now I want to find it, do you think I can??? - that RBR are using the overrun ignition in qually, but for reliability, as their solution has an impact on engine life, it is not used in the races. |
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