Andres125sx wrote:I fing it quite absurd. first of all, I´m not sure if that active geometry will be good enough for real steering angles, the video only show small steering angles, what about if you´re parking and need full steering? I can´t see that active geometry moving that far
Then, that must be extremely expensive, to what purpose? Anybody is willing to pay a good amount of $$$ to reduce drag and a little bit fuel consumption? Nosense
Also, it may be beneficial for high speed, but at high speed steering angles are small, so no need for that complex system, while at low speed, when the system would be more demanded, it´s not needed at all
And as posted, for the rear wheels you don´t need it at all, VW solution (were they the first?) is much more practical and probably equally effective
Basically I find it an extremely complex and probably expensive system for a very small benefit, so I don´t think we´ll hear anything more about it in the future
They might have the rear wheels being steered to get a decent turning circle radius (like the 918 Hybrid). However, at high speeds, the fact that there is no air trapped in the wheel arches would contribute a lot to reducing the drag (although I agree that it is too high tech to be cost effective).
I don't think VW were the first with this concept, Chrysler were the first with the Airflow concept:
but they did achieve a phenomenal Cd of 0.189, so it definitely helped. I am wondering how they will cool the rear brakes though?
Definitely agree that the XL1 was a much better concept for future production cars (with a cramped rear seat!)
bill shoe wrote:My grumpy perspective is that dynamic wheel arches are a silly novelty. Styling is a static thing, so nobody cares about wheel arches that move or change with motion.
Impressive innovations, such as the 4D-printed dynamic wheel arches, set new standards for kinematics and driving performance. The totally new vehicle design also features a fully-closed outer shell for optimised aerodynamics and reduced drag of just 0.18 cW.
The fully closed outer shell (monolithic construction)/reducing panel gaps (like BlueMotion) must have contributed a lot to the low Cd, I wonder how much did the 'dynamic wheel arches' contribute?
“Speed has never killed anyone. Suddenly becoming stationary...that’s what gets you.” - JC