Road rage

All the news about the e-tolling saga...

F1 exhaust rules no blow for McLaren

Comment on this story


IOL mot pic feb3 F1 McLaren

Getty

(From left) Lewis Hamilton, McLaren boss Martin Whitmarsh and Jenson Button with the smoothly-styled 2012 MP-27 Formula One car.

McLaren's technical boffins are confident they can claw back much of the aerodynamic performance taken away by rule changes enforced by Formula One's governing body this season.

The 2012 regulations have forced teams to re-position exhaust systems so that they exit periscope-style rather than having the gases blown through the rear diffuser for aerodynamic gain.

Sophisticated engine mapping systems that allow a constant flow of hot exhaust gases even when the driver is off the throttle have also been banned.

Technical director Paddy Lowe explained at the launch of the team's new MP4-27 car: “We now have new constraints in terms of the geometry, so that is where we can put the exhaust pipe and what angle it can be directed at, all of that intended to keep it high and away from the diffuser.

“The fact of the matter, though, is that exhausts exist on a car, you have to have them, they blow gas.

“That will always generate some performance, a finite level of performance. Even just simply blowing exhaust out of the back of the car produces thrust that makes the car quicker,” he added.

“So there still is a very narrow extent to which you can use exhaust gas to generate performance aerodynamically. Much, much reduced from last year but inevitably we've been trying to look at the ways to make the most of that.”

TIGHTLY PACKAGED REAR END

The MP4-27 showed off in a functional launch with the minimum of fanfare on Wednesday drew attention for the tightly-packaged rear-end and smooth bulges on the bodywork where the exhausts exit.

Engineering director Tim Goss said the focus now was more on extracting gains from 'unblown' performance at the rear of the car rather than 'blown'.

He was coy when asked to put a figure on the overall loss of downforce compared to last year, when McLaren won six races and finished overall runners-up to Red Bull and Sebastian Vettel in both championships.

“We've set ourselves some ambitious targets and we'd expect to recover a lot of what we lost,” he said.

“You optimise around a certain package and we thought we were particularly good at achieving performance from the exhaust system and blowing the diffuser last year.

“You pay a price in terms of base performance of the car, we knew that, there were prices and trades that we were accepting, and ultimately last year it produced the quickest car,” continued Goss.

“This year we've taken those gains back and worked harder on them and pushed that area harder.

“I don't want to quote numbers, but we've set very ambitious targets and we'd like to think that we go back with an equally competitive car.” - Reuters

Motoring newsletter - click here to keep up to speed with the best in motoring

sign up

Share |  

Facebook icon

Facebook

Twitter icon

Twitter

Google icon

Google

Yahoo icon

Yahoo

Reddit icon

Reddit

del.icio.us icon

del.icio.us

Pinterest icon

Pinterest

Email

Print

  • Rate this article
  • Average reader rating (0 votes) 0 Stars

Comment Guidelines



  1. Please read our comment guidelines.
  2. Login and register, if you haven’ t already.
  3. Write your comment in the block below and click (Post As)

JR, wrote

IOL Comments
10:17am on 3 February 2012
IOL Comments

FIA are pathetic. Every time a team or teams come up with something new they try and ban it. Why dont theyhavea single manufacturer producing identical machines with the same setups and same power output and make the sport boring as hell. FIA is misisng teh boat seriously here.

Report this

IOL Comments

Showing items 1 - 1 of 1

Join us on

IOL-Social networks IOL-Social networks
IOL-Social networks

Mobile
on m.iol.co.za

IOL-Social networks

Newsletters
Subscribe

IOL-Social networks

RSS feeds
Subscribe

Business Directory