turbof1 wrote:Given the biggest wing is the car itself, it makes sense not to put too much weight into smaller active aero devices.
Hey guys, thanks for the feedback on the illustrations.ChrisDanger wrote:My problem with the image below is that you're trying to reduce this car to some simple 2D shapes, where the variation in shape laterally is very significant. While there is some merit to this, in perhaps it's "better than nothing", I wouldn't try and understand any behaviour from this illustration, apart from maybe that the underbody is interesting. I find the red curve in particular to be wholly unrepresentative, and the blue curve is not much better. There is a whole lot more going on here, with the interaction of a number of different features in all three dimensions.
Kudos for trying though. All I can say is that this car looks very slippery.
https://s32.postimg.org/v6w1dx6yt/2wings_02.jpg
Newey has spent much of the latter part of his career perfecting these structures (which are flow-conditioning devices as much as downforce generators). "Inventing" an entirely new method would be a waste of resources . It would be effectively throwing out decades of work and starting again, to some degree.SR71 wrote:...my gut tells me that when Newey was unleashed from restrictions the last thing he would be interested in would be the little wings at the front and rear, anti-F1 in a way.
You're sorta in the ballpark.Andres125sx wrote:From my ignorant point of view this is not an inverted wing, it is just a very big diffuser, wich acts completely differently. Well not completely, but a diffuser does not cause lift/DF because of different pressures caused by air going over different cord lenghts, but because of ground effects, or that vacuum efect caused by diffusers, as the space under the diffuser increases as air move backward (or the car move forward), and front aero/vortices always try to seal car sides so air does not enter the underside of the car filling that space. Increasing space with no air (ideally) filling that space, pressure go down, and that sucks the car generating DF. Same as a fan.
That´s my far from expert pov, I´d be glad to know some experts opinion to see how wrong I am
Bhall? Are you reading? I´m sure you´ll be happy correcting me
I disagree. Genius such as Newey will have bigger and better ideas than the pathetic restriction boxes forced upon him by F1.ChrisDanger wrote:Newey has spent much of the latter part of his career perfecting these structures (which are flow-conditioning devices as much as downforce generators). "Inventing" an entirely new method would be a waste of resources . It would be effectively throwing out decades of work and starting again, to some degree.SR71 wrote:...my gut tells me that when Newey was unleashed from restrictions the last thing he would be interested in would be the little wings at the front and rear, anti-F1 in a way.
And yet there's an F1-style wing under the nose with F1-style treatment at the outer ends to direct air, F1-style, around the front wheels.SR71 wrote:
The chances of him being more interested in tiny wings versus ground effect over the entire length of the car is almost zero.
Yep. And? If he wanted make another f1 car he would have, that's not what we have here. So the fact that he didn't kinda says a lot...Just_a_fan wrote:And yet there's an F1-style wing under the nose with F1-style treatment at the outer ends to direct air, F1-style, around the front wheels.SR71 wrote:
The chances of him being more interested in tiny wings versus ground effect over the entire length of the car is almost zero.