My comment about the “strange understanding” sounded a bit harsh to some people and I’m sorry for that. My point is that reading some of the posts one gets the impression that an element is going to generate a force only if it has a 15+° angle of attack compared with the horizontal, the section has a very curved camberline and has endplates on both sides; if these requirements aren’t fulfilled then it doesn’t generate a force, you can’t even call that element wing or the section airfoil. Well, if all of that was true then many airplanes fly without wings. I was just trying to point out something that mep already tried to point out, with little success, not because his explanation wasn’t good but apparently because of the confidence of some posters on the opposite opinion, hence my comment about the “strange understanding”. I apologize if it sounded offensive, it certainly wasn’t my intention.
Guest wrote:
Well, I guess I am one of those who thought that that the "flow conditioner wings" direct the airflow towards the main downforce generating element, the rear wing and don't necessarily generate downforce on its own. They are somewhat like turning vanes that guide the airflow.
In fact also the turning vanes do generate a force on the supports. Any time you modify the flow direction with an element, you have a force on that element. Then, if to improve the airflow toward the main downforce generating element, I decide to put a wing to redirect the airflow, isn’t pretty natural that I try do to it in a way so the force generate by the element is also pointing downward ? If I succeed or not is matter of ability, wind tunnel time etc etc. so to comment each specific case isn’t easy, but the principle doesn’t negate it.
As for the shelf wings, it looks like they operate in collaboration with the rear wing, in a way that, especially in some designs, reminds me a bit of the leading edge flaps used on airplanes wings. Even if just judging by the inclination it looks like the shelf wing could generate lift, you have to consider the influence of the upwash caused on the element by the rear wing right behind and that’s pretty important.
walter wrote:
youre wrong, those wings have no incline, they dont produce downforce nor lift, look closely at the first picture you linked.
You say that because the section is, judging from pictures, symmetrical, and horizontal. But as previously pointed out that doesn’t guarantee that the element doesn’t generate a force, you have to consider many things for the airflow direction, the mutual influence of the two winglets, the camera body right above, the fact that the winglets are on the upper edge of the engine cover, there’s the engine air intake right in front (and it has a huge influence in the airflow in that area with the amount of air entering in the intake dependant mainly by the engine rpm and not by velocity), the driver’s head etc etc etc. Furthermore for wings with a small aspect ratio (span/chord) 3D effects are pretty important hence the wing section tells only part of the story.
Obviously the resultant force isn’t going to be the 50% of the downforce of the car, but also assuming that it’s just a tiny percentage, I wouldn’t neglect that contribute considering that most of the game in F1 is on the small percentages. Then you have to work on the optimisation of the coupling with other car’s parts to achieve the highest efficiency, but the same is true for every part of the car, basically no part of a F1 has only 1 function, everything is interrelated.