manchild wrote:Why are the noses raised than?
The raised nose does not necessarily send
more air
under the flat bottom - to look at it, there is often a projecting shelf at the front of the floor I can visualise air forming high pressure on the top surface of this. Is'nt the high nose about managing air to the sidepod intakes and then around and over the sidepods (i.e. you get a cleaner flow into the intakes and also back to the ever important rear wing)?
manchild wrote:More air flowing underneath the car = lower pressure. Car’s bottom and track form Venturi tube and as the amount of air increases in the point where the car is closes to the ground. That point as the narrowest increases speed of air and low pressure.
Nose is the front end of Venturi tube and the diffuser rear end of Venturi tube while wooden plank and floor (all the way) are the mid section with lowest pressure/highest air speed, right?
More air does not mean lower pressure, faster air does (EDIT: which is what Dave said - I was typing this while he posted!). Sending too much air under could easily slow it down surely?
I think it is best not to think of a venturi tube in this situation - the air flows in at the front in the direction of travel, but it's easy to visualise that a lot of the air will be sucked in at the sides at 45deg (ish) to the direction of travel. I.e. it's not the forward speed of the car pushing air under it, but the energy of the diffuser & wing sucking air out from underneath which causes a pressure drop, which the air at the front & sides tries to fill - to me the logical conclusion to that statement is that you don't want to encourage air in as this is only headed in that direction in trying to balance the pressure.
Or, to put it another way, you want more air out than in..........
Surely with a flat bottom car all you really want to do is watch the radii of the edges to help the transition of air going under the floor (i.e. maybe you don't want sharp edges which might cause separation and are perhaps more pitch sensitive.