Considering the wealth of knowledge on this site I'm surprised no one has brought this up.
Good read and hopefully this kind of tech pushes Porsche/VW to get back into F1.
http://www.motortrend.com/roadtests/alt ... ide/?ti=v3
Will do.Websta wrote:check the off-topic chat, probably mentioned in there with the other non-F1 related stuff.
I don't understand what they are talking about:Also in an effort to reduce drag, the side vents in the front fascia are able to open and close depending on cooling needs. In most conditions they will remain closed to push air around the car rather than through it. But the designers insisted they open when the car is at rest for aesthetic reasons.
How is the frontal area reduced by letting air flow through the car?tok-tokkie wrote: 4. I am also surprised that deflecting air around the car is more efficient than letting it flow through the car. Basically allowing it through the car reduces the frontal area. Seems like that reduced area is more than offset by the friction of the air flowing through the car. Not what I would have expected.
1. They inlets are the ones under each headlight.tok-tokkie wrote:From the link:I don't understand what they are talking about:Also in an effort to reduce drag, the side vents in the front fascia are able to open and close depending on cooling needs. In most conditions they will remain closed to push air around the car rather than through it. But the designers insisted they open when the car is at rest for aesthetic reasons.
1. Are they referring to the two INLETS each side of the number plate? (Vents are what air comes out of, not what air flows into). It seems to fit in with the staement that the air is deflected around the car rather than through it.
2. If they are referring to those inlets how do they open & close? Is is a black flap or louvre system? If so how does that affect the aesthetics?
3. There is also some air inlet(?) behind the door but they are surely not referring to that.
4. I am also surprised that deflecting air around the car is more efficient than letting it flow through the car. Basically allowing it through the car reduces the frontal area. Seems like that reduced area is more than offset by the friction of the air flowing through the car. Not what I would have expected.
But where do you have this on a car? I think to have air flow through the car would only be done for aerodynamic reasons like the Ferrari nose hole in 2008.tok-tokkie wrote:If there was a straight open pipe from front to back then the area of the pipe would not form part of the frontal area.