piast9 wrote: ↑28 Feb 2022, 17:20
CrazyCarperF1 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2022, 18:36
The solution shouldn't be too difficult, the teams just have to figure out how much air they can squeeze under the floor before it stalls at minimum ride height.
I was thinking about that too. I don't fully understand why they lose so much downforce when the suspension is compressed. Touching the ground itself should not cause major issues since you seal the tunnels better that way. Is it just because of the tunnel crossection being squeezed past their optimal point? If so they should be able to modify them to not stall so dramatically.
If they don't do that the car may behave ok for most of the situations but then start to porpoise when the car hits a bump. That may be dangerous in a situation when the racing line is smooth and the car hits a bump when overtaking.
Not an aerodynamicist, but my interpretation of what is happening is as follows… You have air going through the tunnels, the more air you get through the tunnels (and exiting through the diffuser) the more downforce you generate… The downforce makes the cars squat (reduce the distance to the ground)… When that distance to the ground is reduced, the tunnels “choke”, meaning there is less space now for the air and therefore the amount of air traveling through the tunnel is suddenly and abruptly interrupted… This makes the car lose downforce and therefore the car raises on reference to ground… As soon as this happens, the choke is now gone and the air starts accelerating again through the tunnel, the car ones again squats and the cycle gets started again.