Modérateurs: Heikki-spirit, noux, Drool1, HAD RF1
quidam a écrit:le mot "predécesseur" n'a pas de femininl n’y en a pas. Ce n’est ni un titre, ni une fonction, mais une « situation ». Dans ce cas, la distinction du genre – donc du sexe – ne semble pas indispensable, et l’usage peut se contenter d’un genre unique. . Donc pas besoin d’un féminin pour témoin, prédécesseur, précurseur, auteur, etc.
Par contre on dit bien un menteur, une menteuse
As for Vitaly, everybody in the team knows that he needs time to come good - but that he will come good. Don't underestimate the challenge of being a rookie in F1 in 2010. Here's what our team principal Eric Boullier had to say after the race...
"We have to give him time to learn. He did very little testing during the winter, and there is a lot of pressure at every race weekend. That makes it all the more important that we don’t add to it unnecessarily. He knows the circuit in Istanbul and, from Vitaly’s point of view, it will be an opportunity to demonstrate what he is capable of. We have great belief in his ability to deliver."
Vitaly has shown the potential to score points, and race strongly, in every session. The challenge is now to put all of those elements together into a clean, trouble-free, points-scoring weekend.
Starting with the obvious – the car is leaning backwards, so the weight distribution would appear biased towards the rear. The lifting strap is usually about 1800mm from the front axle, so a bit more than half way.
Look at the back of the car; The double diffuser entry section is pretty large, but not extreme by today’s standards, apparently. It is also believed to be quite close to the Toyota design, which may well be because of the aerodynamic expertise hired in from Toyota over the winter.
The most interesting revelation from this photo is the front section. Look at the floor near the leading edge of the bargeboard; it starts wider then tapers to the minimum width until widening for the driver’s seat area.
The narrowing helps the chin (which looks a bit like a tea tray) area work as a diffuser, with air being fed by the clean centre section of the front wing. Downforce generated here gives a forward centre of pressure, and perhaps helps explain how Ferrari can use a seemingly benign front wing without suffering from a forward balance in high speed.
The other interesting revelation is to do with the way the team operates the ride height of the car. This is a big talking point this season due to the new rules on refueling.
The plank retaining skids are cleverly detailed around the inner edges
of the plank wear holes. This is probably to allow the car to be run a
fraction lower whilst still keeping within wear limits. It shows a good
understanding of precisely how the FIA apply the plank wear regulation in practice too.
They are clearly running plenty of rake, look closely at the front of the plank and you can see that there is hard rubbing , while there are just a few witness marks of light touching further back. The front of the plank looks like it is deflecting up, since there seems to be hard rubbing on the entire area ahead of the seat despite minimal touching further back.
With refueling banned this season and the car therefore required to carry 160 kilos of fuel, which lowers it, giving as little as possible away on ride height is very important.
nibbler a écrit:c'est celui là le nouvel aileron ?
http://f1.gpupdate.net/fr/photolarge.ph ... =1102-4462
Utilisateurs parcourant ce forum: Aucun utilisateur enregistré et 3 invités