Great minds think alike. I emailed the author of the article to ask him whether he'd considered a closed canopy and how much difference it'd make. I also suggested a multi-element front wing rather than front wheel covers.machin wrote:There's an interesting article in the current Racecar Engineering magazine which gives the advantages in downforce and aero efficiency that could be had from shrouding the wheels of a single seater....
My latest take on the concept (with cleaner air to the rear wing courtesy of a canopy over the driver):-
Putting them on the sprung mass requires extremely high spring rates for platform control.skgoa wrote:But you don't want to have unnecessary weight on your unsprung parts. You want them to be as compliant as possible.
Aero down force has no mass. The only added mass would be the rather minimal aero structure Jim hall's early Chaparrals. Granted that some of the early suspension-mounted wings were a bit flimsy.skgoa wrote:But you don't want to have unnecessary weight on your unsprung parts. You want them to be as compliant as possible.
and how do you think that force reacts through the tires?skgoa wrote:You do realize that downforce is a force acting down on the car?
in principle, downforce is not to be regarded as without mass under these dynamic conditions (ie working the suspension)allstaruk08 wrote:"downforce has force but not mass." so downforce produces mass but has no mass? (just trying to understand since im pretty inexperienced with aero subjects)