Tzk wrote: ↑10 Mar 2024, 10:41
I can’t think of a reason a team like Mercedes didn’t arrive at the same conclusion and still they went with the L shape. There must be a good reason why they still stick to L shape wings.
Maybe the interaction with the Diffusor, beam wing and the bodywork?
Can't say I know for sure, but these curved spanwise shapes weren't present in 2022, while Mercedes introduced their mid-level wing in early 2023. Most likely they didn't want to spend too much CFD and WT resources optimising wing design between seasns, when the rest of their car was in need of a lot more attention.
G-raph wrote: ↑10 Mar 2024, 20:30
Nice one, great to see that kind of CFD study.
Regarding the "including the endplate forces or not" debate, there are valid points on both sides but it would be interesting to report the L and L/D numbers with and without the endplates so we can all learn how much of a difference it makes. As they are the same design for all mainplanes it should be a fair comparison.
Vanja #66 wrote: ↑09 Mar 2024, 13:08
An honest question, is anyone really surprised RB was the first to figure out U wing is the optimal shape for higher downforce levels?
I'd say let's wait until Monaco before making such a leap.
RB19's high downforce RW was scoop shape, not U-shape. Scoop shape should still offer more total downforce (at reduced efficiency as you have shown) if all sections are properly optmised around the abrubt transition.
Endplates generate about 100N of lift in total in every simulation. They are quite thin in my model, much thinner than reality, so they would only do their primary function of pressure field preservation on the underside. So they skew the lift figures a lot and then different drag figures for each design give a bit different skew levels of L/D ratio. I'm certain endplates on cars, being optimised to near perfection, have very different effect on entire rear end performance.
As for RB wings, Monaco 2023 wing was their 2022 high-level design. In reality, you can't really introduce a lot of curvature when you extend the maximum allowed cross-section height all the way towards the endplates. I was referring to medium and low-level wings regarding the U shape (and I should have made that clear
), which are used a lot more often.