Craigy, I have thought about a similar idea before but not located in the rear wing (mainly cause of the dowturns the guys here mentioned). Instead I have thought about water running through the body panels. Of course carbon fiber is not good tranfering heat and purging the system can be a issue.
About Terrys idea, well, it seems smart but I still have a doubt about air cooled engines.
Look: this little 125cc monster can pump 55HP. Thats 440HP per liter, in an F1 engine that would be 1056HP! (Ignore its a 2 strokes engine)
I have that same engine in my kart, a less compressed and single carb mouth version (because Im not a millionaire
) that can pump reliable 38HP. Here in Argetina those still are ahead of the water cooled ones because they are simpler, cheaper, lighter and dont have a water pump consuming power. Downturn is on hot summer days.
riff_raff wrote:... A significant portion of the heat rejection in a modern F1 engine is already accomplished through the fuel latent heat effects in the intake system...
One of the first things you have to do when karting with the engine above is to "carburate" it: you have to play with air-fuel mixture (high and low RPM bolts in the carb) and that depends on to the weather and what you would like the engine to do.
A too rich mixture assures lubrication and maintains the engine very cool, although it will lack power.
A poor mixture will literally make the engine a fast rocket and blow up some seconds later. It just cant handle the heat.
Fuel mixture is very very important in a air cooled engine.
Some links:
http://www.aircooledtechnology.com/
http://www.enginehistory.org/air-cooled_cylinders_1.htm
http://www.bajajusa.com/air%20cooled%20 ... cooled.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen ... led_engine
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