speedsense wrote:To prove out the downforce production theories, or lack of downforce production, take a winged car and add a diffuser to it. Note the added increase of downforce. Now remove the wings, and you will find that a high percentage of the "added" downforce has all but disappeared. The reason is that the device does not produce downforce, ie: negative lift- but simply helps remove the lift causing high pressure areas that develope undercar and grant the wings more downforce. ......
IMHO- A diffuser is not a downforce device, but an anti-lift device.
Speedsense,
I, and I think many others here, would disagree with you. I don't like referring to
the diffuser itself as a downforce making device, but
the underbody as a system sure is a downforce making device.
The diffuser is just
the most visible part
of the underbody so it gets a fair amount
of attention.
Whether you call it anti-lift or downforce is just semantics. It's
the same thing. Any force in
the downward direction, even if it only partially cancels a net upwards force, is downforce. Underbodys can generate significant amount
of net downforce both with and without wings. However a
diffuser/underbody designed to work with a rear wing should not be
the same as a
diffuser/underbody designed to work with no wings. Just removing a wing from an underbody setup built to work with a wing isn't proving much
of anything.
My point is, with and without wings
the underbody is a giant source
of net downforce. With a winged car
the wings create yet more downforce individually, further help drive
the diffusers effectiveness, and most importantly tune aero balance.