M840TR wrote:SmallSoldier wrote: ↑26 Mar 2019, 17:40
RonDennis wrote:Wasn't the drag issue just caused by the fact they had to run more wing, because they miscalculated the gap between the sidepods and front tires, which made the car very unstable. They also used the Melbourne spec wing in Barcelona, which gave the car too much downforce.
Last year they have to add drag to compensate for the loss of downforce when in a turn... The problem with the distance between the front wheels and the bargeboard area was that there wasn’t enough space for the bargeboard to properly manage the tire wake, therefore creating stall issues and loss of downforce... This forced the team to increase both rear wing and front wing in an effort to recover the lost downforce at the expense of drag.
Now, the goal of every team is to create downforce without adding too much drag... That’s what Mclaren has tried to do this season, by increasing the length of the car they have more
“floor”, their nose, sidepod design and undercut are all sending additional clean air to the diffuser, therefore creating downforce without the drag expense.
They aren’t using the Medium Downforce wing to reduce drag necessarily, my theory is that if they would add a regular high downforce wing, the front wing won’t be able to cope with the additional rear downforce and that’s what is limiting them.
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The nose doesn't send air to the diffuser. It has three ducts which send air to the cape that generates a vortex which merges with the y250 and sent outboard by the bargeboards to manage tyre wake. This is called outwash. The sidepod deflectors provide the same function. I think the focus is definitely on reducing drag by using the spoon RW, specially given their history in the hybrid era.
Thank you for the explanation, I may have the concepts confused... As far as I understood it, there were “Main” vortex’s generated by the front wing:
The outwash vortex: Created by the cascade elements (now non-existent) and the end plate, and there job was to get the tire wake as far from the car as possible (and what was creating most of the air turbulence for the cars behind and the intention of the new regulations was to eliminate/mitigate this).
The Y250 vortex: Created by the tips of the wing elements at the end of the wing’s neutral section. This vortex isn’t intended to manage the tire wake, nor to help it’s outwash... On the contrary, the intention is to energize the air going to the bargeboard are so that at point it is “cleaned up” and send towards the coke bottle section of the car and maximize the diffuser effect. Been said that, there is a portion when the Y250 vortex reaches the bargeboards, part of it should also be going towards creating a barrier around the floor which will help with the outwash, but that isn’t the main purpose of it.
In regards to the nose, I stand corrected... Although, after reviewing the exits of the orifices in it, it seemed to actually direct them towards the cape, which in return was directing the air to the front of the bargeboards and “below the floor”... Not denying that the edges of the cape are creating vortices that will join the Y250 and further energize it, but my understanding is that it wasn’t it’s main purpose... With the cape main objective been to direct more air towards the underside of the car.
I appreciate any further explanations! Always trying to learn something new and fix my concepts if they are wrong
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