My idea is just simple, more underbody downforce, less downforce from wings.
I think the front wing has to be raised and the rear wing less angle of attack with a much smaller second plane.
wesley123 wrote:My idea is just simple, more underbody downforce, less downforce from wings.
I think the front wing has to be raised and the rear wing less angle of attack with a much smaller second plane.
I can name one that you can, the wing.....it is very safe to quantify that number, at least on the "normal" or standard positions on a race car.F1_eng wrote:It is a complete system, things don't necesseraly work on their own.
Removing a wing to see what the actual diffuser forces are does not begin to analyse the diffuser forces independently. You are completely changing the flow conditions, both above and below the diffuser.
There are so many interactions, it is very difficult to quantify the effect of large global components individualy.
You might also add, wheel inboard and outboard influences (mostly front but rears also at least from the inboard side. Suspension wakes, ground irregularities, tire influences and wakes, above/infront/behind, body/floor wakes and vortices (whether intended or not).F1_eng wrote:Please, I don't need you to tell me I'm correct.
You must not know much about how wings and other devices contriute to other downstream devices if you make the stated assumption. Front wing development has an enormous effect on conditioning the flow further along the car.
The front wing has a lot of understide vortex generators, compound flicks on the main planes, lots of geometry on the front wing end-plates, not to mention the whole upwash effect of the front wing itself.
Other posts have stated that, my post is only reflecting on what the original poster has asked and the windtunnel test that was experienced and the overall genre of this thread.I don't state that the diffuser produces x ammount of downforce in it's own. We don't test individual components in the wind tunnel for this exact reason, it would be 100x cheaper and easier than what we have to do.
Not as it pertains to a race car, where it's a diffuser in name only, as it's use and reason of use does not reflect the theory of use of a "diffuser" but rather the use as it pertains the floor in front of it. Controlling the exhausting flow only increases it's effectiveness (in small (+ - 5%) amounts, I might add) and effects the CoP point inside. My "close" statement is vague, I should have used the percentage number which was 87% when the ride height and rake were the same. The difference in rearward wake (going by the CoP critical movement) at the rear of the diffuser was only a difference of 4.5% between the wing off and the wing on, leaving all things the same, except the target ride height and rake.That is a contradicting statement, how can the flow be very close to winged conditions but then you go and say the "ehausting flow was very different", this "exhausting flow" is exactly what the diffuser is designed for.
Is it safe? The chaotic aspect of a "measured" (via data acquisition) rolling race car at speed, tends to skew those numbers from windtunnel tests and computer generated geometry calculations from a stationary car. The numbers are only safe after real time measurement to back them up. Unless you also have a simulation program such as Adams or PiSim to draw calculations/conclusions from.I know exactly how much downforce the front and rear wings produce, downforce/lift of each wheel, overall car downforce. From this we can know the exact numbers for everything else on the car as a whole, safe to say the diffuser is a huge portion of this "everything else" number.
Am I reading that right?speedsense wrote:The difference in rearward wake (going by the CoP critical movement) at the rear of the diffuser was only a difference of 4.5% between the wing off and the wing on, leaving all things the same, except the target ride height and rake.
The difference between removing the rear wing and the change of the rear wake, as it effected the exhaust flow of the diffuser, caused a 4.5% movement ( percentage of the length of the diffuser) in the Center of pressure inside of the diffuser, to a forward position (closer to the mouth of the diffuser-no rear wing). This measurement was just removal of the wing and no other adjustments.kilcoo316 wrote:Am I reading that right?speedsense wrote:The difference in rearward wake (going by the CoP critical movement) at the rear of the diffuser was only a difference of 4.5% between the wing off and the wing on, leaving all things the same, except the target ride height and rake.
You have measured the downforce of a car, rear wing on, and rear wing off... the difference in C.P. location is ~4.5%?
You have then extrapolated that to mean the wake effects are not much different?
My apology, I'm a chassis engineer/data analysis not a writer...F1_eng wrote:What?
The diffuser, diffuses and the theory behind them are conventional. The floor is a completely different part.
4.5% movement of the CoP within this diffuser, of the distance of the entire diffuser. The CoP location was relative to the generation of lower air pressure area proceeding (upstream) the mouth of the diffuser.How do you comapre wakes, stating a difference of 4.5%. How is this calculated from "CoP critical movement"?
The sides are very open to intrusion of high pressure. Though ride height and side panel changes, splitters, were allowed at the time. The speeds of the car didn't exceed 140 mph at the time. Basically it's a FF with wings and higher horsepower...You can be assured than conclusions I come up with from our measured data are as safe as safe can get. It is a colaboration of wind-tunnel, track data and CFD.
I am not totally familiar with Van Dieman FF2000, before my time but the pictures I have seen would suggest that the under-floor geometry does not lend itself very well to diffuser/floor downforce effects. The car looks very open and "loose" in my oppinion. Not much constraining/guiding of the air flow.
I have lost the direction of this thread im afraid.
Sorry Terry, but there are a few errors in there. The general idea of the diffuser is to help speed up the air under the car in order to create a higher dynamic pressure and as a consequence lower static such.riff_raff wrote: As noted, the diffuser itself does not produce downforce. It is simply an aero device that creates a dynamic airflow region with lower ambient pressure in the trailing wake of the undertray. Since fluids tend to flow from regions of high pressure to low, this creates an environment where the air underneath the car naturally wants to flow (or more correctly, expand) out the back edge of the undertray faster than it can flow in past the restrictive front edge, creating a zone of lower dynamic pressure between the undertray and road surface.
Typically at most tracks, the car saw 130 but at few long straight away tracks and very trimmed we did see 139.5 (I rounded up) with a bullet motor.riff_raff wrote:I love the technical level of this discussion (or argument). Keep it up!
speedsense quotes a rearward CofP movement of "4.5%" on a Van Diemen FF2000 chassis after removing the rear wing entirely. I don't really know squat about the aero configuration of that particular vehicle. But based on that comment, I can assume one (or more) of the following is true:
A)That's a very stable underwing design.
B)That's a very ineffective underwing design.
C)That's a very ineffective rear wing design.
And finally, in regards to your comment, "The speeds of the car didn't exceed 140 mph at the time", I find it truly impressive that a FF2000 car can even achieve any speed close to 140 mph while making any appreciable amount of aero downforce. =D>
Best regards,
Terry