How many rapid direction changes does it do?
And can you actually affect that in any way or is it just creating one and making sure it goes where it should?
Only Ferrari pic we got is from the side from last week and in that you could see it didnt act like the RB as in going where it should, it more lost its form and became dispersed air just looked like smoke at the back end of.Chuckjr wrote:Since there are so many references to the ferrari vortices being so much "worse" compared to the RB, can someone post a side by side comparison please? That may help in understanding the beauty of what is being seen here.
And, is Newey really this good? Is he the only man on this planet that is capable of this? By the reactions I am seeing here from a lot of guys that seem to know a lot, I gather he just may be.
You have to remember that the FOM camera's are in different positions and so capturing what we saw on the RB9 yesterday on other car's won't happen...Chuckjr wrote:Since there are so many references to the ferrari vortices being so much "worse" compared to the RB, can someone post a side by side comparison please? That may help in understanding the beauty of what is being seen here.
And, is Newey really this good? Is he the only man on this planet that is capable of this? By the reactions I am seeing here from a lot of guys that seem to know a lot, I gather he just may be.
It is affected by the airstream around it.SectorOne wrote:How many rapid direction changes does it do?
And can you actually affect that in any way or is it just creating one and making sure it goes where it should?
May be but at lower speeds the pressure differences are too small to cause vapor to condense. Vertex may still be there but we just don't see it.timbo wrote:I wonder, the vortex is obviously most intense as speed goes up. Maybe it is tuned to affect the airflow at the top speed somehow reducing drag?
Why wouldn't it?oT v1 wrote:just stays so perfectly in place
good find, +1 if i could
The vortex is not attached to the car, but being pushed around by it. It will always follow the path of least resistance. The key to making it last so long is to condition the air around it as well, not just the vortex. A pressure drop anywhere along its path and it will break apart, like on the F138. I believe that the key to the RB9 is how it handles the turbulence from the wheels. You simply can't get a vortex, or any other flow for that matter, through a turbulent flow area without losses, but it seems that there is no influence (pretty much laminary flow) around the wheel area and past the barge boards =D> . Without these problems you can dictate exactly where you want the air to go, and it will get there. The only way I could see them doing this is a combination between their blown hub and a different vortex from the front wing which is aimed at the area along & behind the wheel, forcing the turbulent air outward, away from the car. This is something that they will carry over into next year, and if the engine can handle the Newey packaging then they will dominate again (oh I hope not).ringo wrote:Why wouldn't it?oT v1 wrote:just stays so perfectly in place
good find, +1 if i could
If the car parts are rigid, there's no reason for the vortex to waver.
the corkscrew shape is probably due to the interaction with the vortex from the truning vanes under the nose, that make the trajectory of the flap vortex spiral.SectorOne wrote:How many rapid direction changes does it do?
And can you actually affect that in any way or is it just creating one and making sure it goes where it should?
But the corkscrew effect isnt that just how a vortice looks ? I mean it is a vortex, which is spinning or swirling perhaps. Then if that shapes moves to the side which it does here is most likely based on what you say and i also said above, but the shape is a normal shape no without interaction ?shelly wrote:the corkscrew shape is probably due to the interaction with the vortex from the truning vanes under the nose, that make the trajectory of the flap vortex spiral.SectorOne wrote:How many rapid direction changes does it do?
And can you actually affect that in any way or is it just creating one and making sure it goes where it should?