It wont have a problem staying attached to the front wing, as it's very low cambaer compared to the rear.hardingfv32 wrote:A serious question: What needs straightening so soon? The air flow has just made its first contact with the car?
Would this not be similar to the vertical dividers found in the diffuse, helping to keep flow attached to the back side of the wing?
Brian
Agrred 100%. I was going to say the same thing until I scrolled down and saw your comment.ringo wrote:It wont have a problem staying attached to the front wing, as it's very low cambaer compared to the rear.hardingfv32 wrote:A serious question: What needs straightening so soon? The air flow has just made its first contact with the car?
Would this not be similar to the vertical dividers found in the diffuse, helping to keep flow attached to the back side of the wing?
Brian
These strakes prevent diagonal flow under the wing. If the flow goes diagonally, when it comes over the top edge, it will be misaligned with the flow over the top.
This will create vortices and will be bad for anything behind it, and to the outisde of it.
You want parallel flow between top and bottom for better efficiency.
This case really applies to aircraft where drag is fuel, and fuel is money.ringo wrote: Vortex generation is not necessarily good. It's only used in cases where there is no better option to improve flow.
Avoiding vortex generation is the goal in most cases.