yep, for the same reason i would head for a dual concave shape a-la the acura, it allows for better flow though the channels under low ride height conditions. I dont know if it has a raised nose wich i doubt, there fore placing such shape in each diffuser section would give better results(i think) What also might be an option is creating a small tip on the edges, maybe sealing the floor by creating an vortex therePNSD wrote:Would not a concave allow for a less pitch sensitive underbody?
Yep: http://www.mulsannescorner.com/AcuraARX-01-5.htmlwesley123 wrote:
I dont know if it has a raised nose wich i doubt,
Remember the tolerance: 5mmvyselegend wrote:Wouldn't bending the floor even slightly affect its rigidity?
I guess the concave shape might also hurt packaging of mechanical components which you'll want as low as possible. But since your goal is not building the car but experiment aero, it's worth testing.
Stall? This small car reaches 230Kph at fastest track...wesley123 wrote:i think concave, though you can make it a double shape, maybe experiment a bit with it?
With a double concave you will effectively create 2 tunnels, would be more effective under stall i think
i was actually talking about the car discussed in the topic, not the acura.RacingManiac wrote:Yep: http://www.mulsannescorner.com/AcuraARX-01-5.htmlwesley123 wrote:
I dont know if it has a raised nose wich i doubt,
For info, the download is an .iso which you then use to burn a bootable CD. The whole environment is standalone and runs from the CD. I think you can set it up to run from a HD.Tonn wrote:Can you run it with 64bit Windows 7
Indeed, thats the first thing I tried.Smokes wrote:hey bellati have you tried simulating the cfd with just half the model which is normal practice for any thing symetrical in 3d CFD,