It's really hot in Bahrain today
Interesting view; large keel, minimal tea-tray (much like the red bull). Small air inlet (forward facing hole) & ride height laser(?) in the downward facing hole.AeroDynamic wrote: ↑11 Mar 2022, 11:14@Albert Fabrega twitter
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FNjtO-vWQAA ... name=large
LHR suspension failure?wogx wrote: ↑11 Mar 2022, 11:23It's really hot in Bahrain today
https://streamable.com/lvlvk4
https://www.wykop.pl/cdn/c3201142/comme ... o3aAkx.jpg
I think a bearing issue - they had something wrong on the rear yesterday. That could get hot enough to cause such a failure.Stu wrote: ↑11 Mar 2022, 11:49LHR suspension failure?wogx wrote: ↑11 Mar 2022, 11:23It's really hot in Bahrain today
https://streamable.com/lvlvk4
https://www.wykop.pl/cdn/c3201142/comme ... o3aAkx.jpg
Forgive my lack of knowledge, but why do the fences curve towards the edge of the floor? I know all the cars have this but doesn't this send the air out from under the floor rather than keeping it in the tunnels? Or is that the point?
Outwashing adds ‘functionality’ to the airflow; more downforce can be generated in doing this. A good proportion of the flow entering the tunnels is first kicked outwards to displace some of the lower front tyre wake further from the car centreline. This flow will then roll up into a vortex along the side of the floor which is ingested back under the car further downstream. Vortex structures along the floor edge seal the underbody from the ambient air, and also shield the diffuser from the dirty lateral flow created at the rear tyre contact patch (aka tyre squirt). Hope this helps.MattWellsyWells wrote: ↑11 Mar 2022, 14:27Forgive my lack of knowledge, but why do the fences curve towards the edge of the floor? I know all the cars have this but doesn't this send the air out from under the floor rather than keeping it in the tunnels? Or is that the point?
That's really helpful thanks.theWPTformula wrote: ↑11 Mar 2022, 18:12Outwashing adds ‘functionality’ to the airflow; more downforce can be generated in doing this. A good proportion of the flow entering the tunnels is first kicked outwards to displace some of the lower front tyre wake further from the car centreline. This flow will then roll up into a vortex along the side of the floor which is ingested back under the car further downstream. Vortex structures along the floor edge seal the underbody from the ambient air, and also shield the diffuser from the dirty lateral flow created at the rear tyre contact patch (aka tyre squirt). Hope this helps.MattWellsyWells wrote: ↑11 Mar 2022, 14:27Forgive my lack of knowledge, but why do the fences curve towards the edge of the floor? I know all the cars have this but doesn't this send the air out from under the floor rather than keeping it in the tunnels? Or is that the point?
Compared to McLaren's floor pic, these vanes ride much closer to the track than the Papayas. I wonder if McLs twist gets stronger outwash but delivers more mass flow to the air that's extracted by the edge vortex?theWPTformula wrote: ↑11 Mar 2022, 18:12Outwashing adds ‘functionality’ to the airflow; more downforce can be generated in doing this. A good proportion of the flow entering the tunnels is first kicked outwards to displace some of the lower front tyre wake further from the car centreline. This flow will then roll up into a vortex along the side of the floor which is ingested back under the car further downstream. Vortex structures along the floor edge seal the underbody from the ambient air, and also shield the diffuser from the dirty lateral flow created at the rear tyre contact patch (aka tyre squirt). Hope this helps.MattWellsyWells wrote: ↑11 Mar 2022, 14:27Forgive my lack of knowledge, but why do the fences curve towards the edge of the floor? I know all the cars have this but doesn't this send the air out from under the floor rather than keeping it in the tunnels? Or is that the point?