djones wrote:It's not a wing as such (no gap in or under it) so I don't see how it creates downforce, so what else can it do???
It seems like a
gurney flap to me. Invented by Dan Gurney to race in Indianapolis, (without a wind tunnel, baby).
Let me quote the link:
"... is nothing like as sophisticated (as a wing or flap). Classically it's no more complex than a length of aluminum right-angle rigidly bolted or riveted to a wing's trailing edge."
The link shows also the vortex it creates in the wake, which explains its effect on downforce.
Dan Gurney installed it on Al Unser car as a desperate measure to see if something could be done about the slow lap times they had in 1971. I cannot resist to quote again:
"In 45 minutes or so, the first Gurney Flap was fabricated and attached to the car's rear wing, and Unser went out again. Within a couple of laps it was clear he was circulating no faster than before and everyone in the pit assumed the flap was a failure. But when Unser came in he called Gurney over and quietly asked him whether anyone was around to spy on what they were doing. Once Gurney had confirmed they were alone, Unser told him the rear was now so well planted that the car was pushing (understeering) badly, hence the poor lap times. All they needed to do was restore the aerodynamic balance by adding more front-end downforce and the car would be transformed. For most of that first season, none of the other teams cottoned on to what Gurney had achieved. Anyone who asked was told that the flap was a purely structural feature to strengthen the wing's trailing edge."
Thirty-five years later it still can deceive people that are fixed on the "only a wing works" idea. After all, it was not understood by the entire Indy pitlane for a year...
Besides it shows two elements useful for racing success: an imaginative engineer under pressure and a sensitive pilot that does not brag about his car.
You can find
here an F1 Technical thread that touches the subject, out of thread, of course.
After re-reading the thread, I find that
DaveKillens gave the same link I am quoting. Honor to the predecessor...