Team: Toto Wolff (Executive Director - Business), Paddy Lowe (Executive Director - Technical), Andy Cowell (Executive Director of Mercedes AMG Powertrains), Niki Lauda (Chairman), Bob Bell (TD), Aldo Costa (ED), Geoffrey Willis (Technology Director), Ron Meadows (SD), Andrew Shovlin (CRE), Simon Cole (CTE), Matthew Dane (CM) Drivers: Lewis Hamilton (44), Nico Rosberg (6) Team name: Mercedes AMG F1 Petronas
A place to discuss the characteristics of the cars in Formula One, both current as well as historical. Laptimes, driver worshipping and team chatter do not belong here.
This serrated edge doesn't extend as far down as the leading edge. The only thing I can think that these do is to break up the boundry layer on the wing. Usually extra surfaces and bumps just cause the boundry layer to get bigger though. Quite the conundrum.
If someone said to me that you can have three wishes, my first would have been to get into racing, my second to be in Formula 1, my third to drive for Ferrari.
Putting this things on the glider wings is well known for atleast two decades. We call it turbolator. It is a zig-zag tape. If put correctly in the area of boundary layer separation, it prevents abrupt transition from laminar to turbolent airflow. Performance of the glider gets a bit better.
Last eight, ten years some people started to R&D so called deturbolators. These devices make wing ofa glider with wortmann profiles 15 to 18% more efficient, meaning better L/D at higher speed for given glider.
If you are interested go and get some info on this page: http://www.deturbulator.org
Last edited by cirrusflyer on 28 Nov 2015, 13:48, edited 1 time in total.
If flying were the language of man, soaring would be its poetry.
It's all about technology!
When you go fast, do not hesitate to go faster!
cirrusflyer wrote:Putting this things on the glider wings is well known for atleast two decades. We call it turbolator. It is a zig-zag tape.
Strangely gliders have it also on the under-side of the wing. Almost ripped that zig-zag tape off when polishing a Duo-Discus yesterday. I know it is off topic. But what's the use on the underside?
Strangely, but abrupt transition from laminar to turbolent airflow has much bigger effect on performance when happening on lower side of the wing. I dont understand this. Try to read some about that on the link I posted abowe.
Sorry for of topic.
If flying were the language of man, soaring would be its poetry.
It's all about technology!
When you go fast, do not hesitate to go faster!