Doubling down on a theory that is technically implausible and downvoting comments proving you why.AR3-GP wrote: ↑10 Jul 2024, 19:42I don't really understand what you guys mean when you say the rod being under tension invalidates the concept.
The reason that the rod is under tension can be for 2 reasons
1) Engineered preload in static conditions (a turnbuckle connection to allow preloading against the stiffness of the floor)
2) Diffuser suction at speed draws the connection at the diffuser downwards. This creates more tension. No different to loading a suspension bridge with cars on the roadway.
If the rod gets longer due to thermal expansion, the diffuser can go down more when the car is on the track.
This is why anyone with any technical chops left here.
Besides being implausible, you don’t even know why you want to do what you’re proposing. If you want to read how modern floors work, buy this SAE paper:
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