thanks



Thanks, I never heard of that prototype, looks good, active rims as well, that's a good idea:shelly wrote:I am not sure about the effect of dirt.
The main aim is to achieve lower drag.
If you leave the flow go around the radius/ corner, it will accelerate lowering its pressure and then detach.
The base pressure on the back face of the car depends on the pressure at the separation line. So if the separation line has lower pressure, all the surface facing the separated wake flow will see a lower pressure, and since this is the backward facing surface.
If you make the flow separate more upstream, and you create a local higher pressure with a convex shape, you get an higher pressure on the backward facing surface of the car and so lower drag.
Reanult recently launche an interesting prototype called Eolab which has two edges actively coming out on the sides of the rear bumper to achieve lower drag.
Kamm and so on is a similar but slighltly different topic
This is an interesting idea however on my vehicle, which has these spoiler features moulded in to the lights, the lights get as dirty as the rest of the back. I.e. they don't appear to reduce dirt on the lights.DaveKillens wrote:Dirt.
Any dirt particles carried by the air are subjected to this disturbed air and instead of flowing around the side and coming into contact with the rear tail lights, and possibly cover the rear tail lights, will most likely never have a chance of attaching.
Safety, it is desirable to keep the rear tail lights, and especially the brake lights clean and visible.