I think you'll find that it is more complex then that. Vortices from the front wing strakes, the splitter, bargeboards, etc will be ingested under the floor and through the diffuser. and with votices having low pressure cores you will find that they actually draw more air under the car rather than sealing off the floor completely.BreezyRacer wrote:Also quite common these days is the use of vortex generators to redirect as much airflow around the sides of the cars to help isolate airflow away from the floor area.
DUH! Yes, it's quite complex, I agree. But based on the simple, wide ranging scope of the question I'm not ready to submit my 30 page dissertation on the subject just yet.tahadar wrote:I think you'll find that it is more complex then that. Vortices from the front wing strakes, the splitter, bargeboards, etc will be ingested under the floor and through the diffuser. and with votices having low pressure cores you will find that they actually draw more air under the car rather than sealing off the floor completely.BreezyRacer wrote:Also quite common these days is the use of vortex generators to redirect as much airflow around the sides of the cars to help isolate airflow away from the floor area.
tahadar wrote:I think you'll find that it is more complex then that. Vortices from the front wing strakes, the splitter, bargeboards, etc will be ingested under the floor and through the diffuser. and with votices having low pressure cores you will find that they actually draw more air under the car rather than sealing off the floor completely.
like I said, this is not entirely true. Mclaren featured large cut-outs ahead of their rear wheels in pre-season testing to promote more airflow into the diffuser by entering under the sides of the floor. Some teams also feature floor 'curls' for the same reason.kilcoo316 wrote:
You want to seal off the sides of the floor.
They screwed up their diffuser.tahadar wrote:like I said, this is not entirely true. Mclaren featured large cut-outs ahead of their rear wheels in pre-season testing to promote more airflow into the diffuser by entering under the sides of the floor. Some teams also feature floor 'curls' for the same reason.
My whole point is that the "they do strive to achieve that" comment may or may not be applicable depending on which aerodynamicist you speak to and that it is not a steadfast rule that will result in failure if you do not keep it your primary objective. It is simply a matter of varying philosophies. The (experienced) people I have discussed this with view their design ideas as 'supporting' the floor seal theory but not explicitly what they were trying to achieve, just a 'by-product' in a way.kilcoo316 wrote: Again - you want to seal off the sides of the floor. They do strive to try and achieve that.