marcello wrote:forgive my ignorance, but I thought that creating a vacuum underneath the floor by using turbines and such required sideskirts around the floor perimeter to seal the vacuum. Given the current regulations on minimum ground clearence, that would certainly not be legal. Furthermore, I thought the whole reason why the Brabham BT46B was banned was because it violated regulations regarding movable aerodynamic parts...
Forget about F1 rules. This is "another racing series". I will quote myself
Belatti wrote:Hi, what do you think about creating vacum in a sport cars flat floor using a couple of Naca ducts connected to the center of the rear brake rotors?
The rules states 40mm ground clearence min and its not a novel concept, I have seen the naca ducts in the floor of cars that are 10 years old.
Jersey Tom wrote:Still have no idea what this concept is. Using vaned rotors to suck air out from underneath the car?
Yeah, are we writing that bad?
marcush. wrote:just an idea:
why not use this very concept to redirect airflow with raising speed ?
this way around you could possibly reduce downforce at highest speeds or tweek the position of centre of pressure with speed ....giving possibly new roads or opportunities in car setup ...
Nice, but I´ll let that for more advanced series. I dont have a windtunnel, I dont have a CFD model, I dont even have a CFD software and I dont know how to use it, yet. The series is
really a low budget one and testing time is shorter than short. Here developments come from the intuitive department
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