organic wrote: ↑27 Feb 2025, 16:14
mwillems wrote: ↑27 Feb 2025, 16:10
the EDGE wrote: ↑27 Feb 2025, 16:07
yes, The blown diffuser had nothing to do with the heat of the exhaust, it utilised the speed of the gas coming out of the exhaust pipe.
The Coanda effect wasn't about tightening the rear, it was utilising a curved surface to attach the exhaust gas to change the direction of flow... ie the Coanda effect
Right, but if the central area that the air attaches to is tighter then isn't it increasing the amount of airflow it can bring to the rear?
More air coming over the diffuser then sucking more air out, increasing downforce?
As far as I understand it, the shaping of this region is more about a balance between optimisation of duct exits, managing upstream losses and pressure recovery, rather than increasing volume of airflow over diffuser
The warm.air won't become a boundary layer?
Help me understand. I've read before on this forum the benefits of a boundary layer formed from cooling exits, but perhaps I misunderstood. I thought a cooler boundary layer slowed airflow in the immediate vicinity...
Energise was the wrong word, I should have said it would reduce turbulence and allow airflow to move more freely to the rear.
Faster airflow over the diffuser improving downforce etc..