AR3-GP wrote: ↑08 Jul 2024, 21:49
_cerber1 wrote: ↑08 Jul 2024, 21:40
I will say this: perhaps the author did not understand the point; he seems to be referring to a rumor from the paddock.
My opinion is that you can use metal with a high expansion or contraction ratio, and you can actually use temperature, for example to change the shape or size of the diffuser, through these rods.
Exactly. The explanation in the post is a bit mistranslated.
The deflection test are performed when the car is off and the material is cold. When temperature raises due to heat, the components expand. The reinforcement rods lengthen. It can allow the floor to lower. It's quite clever if this is what Mclaren have done.
Except the coefficient of expansion for that short of length, sitting in free air (so tons of convection), of any alloy is minuscule.
Using this logic, the exhaust would grow substantially (it doesn’t) or something like an exhaust valve that sees variation of 100* C in a single cycle would cause valve lash to change dramatically.
Let’s do a little math. Say it’s aluminum (high rate of expansion, 23/10^6C*), and the entire rod is heated uniformly (it won’t but hypothetical), and the stay is .5m long.
So say it’s a 32* C day and it heats up to 232* C.
Delta t = 200* C
L = .5m + 23/10^6C * 200 C * .5m
L= .5023m, so it grew .23cm or 2.3mm.
The rod is not heated uniformly sitting in free air and that’s for pure aluminum. Most aluminum alloys are half that rate of expansion, so figure 1.2mm or so, and that’s being very generous with assumptions. Steel alloys will be less and titanium even less.