FluidicSwitch wrote:I would like some clairification as there does still seem to be some incosistancy re: whether the driver control will divert air away from or into the slit in the rear wing, also could someone explain diagramatically how this "stalls" the wing.
I was wondering whether these "fluidic switches" could have been developed first without the need for driver control. Could a simpler system work based purely on the pressure in the intake feeding the switch increasing with airspeed? Could a system be built with multiple intakes in say, the airbox, which has a fluidic switch that changes the direction of airflow only over a certain air-speed thus reducing drag only at top speeds on the straights?
First off, welcome to the forums. If you like arguing and F1 this is the place to be. I'm gonna go ahead and assume you are a journo (and if you work for the BBC for gods sake explain it properly to the commentary team, who kept getting it backwards. Also tell crofty I love him).
So to answer your questions; with no driver input, the rear wing is exploiting the
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coanda_effect to act as a
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circulation_control_wing. By blowing air from the slit, it effectively makes the wing harder to stall, so Mclaren can run it at a higher angle of attack than they otherwise could, giving them more downforce. I haven't seen any particularly good diagrams of this yet, but those wiki pages have some decent pictures on them. So you can then stall the wing simply by reducing the flow from the blown slit (obviously only at high speeds). Stalling reduces the downforce but also the drag, through some long and complex explanation involving the wingtip vorticies.
To answer the second question, yes you could have it set such that the slit stops blowing (or reduces enoungh to stall it) at a certain speed. There were some diagrams a while back showing that, I can't be bothered to find them but the concept is perfectly doable- and without fluidic bistable switches (if you used those, then the sky's the limit or whatever). If this was the case, you'd have to tune the system to stall the wing at any speed above that of the fastest corner on the track.
Anyway enjoy the forums, if you do work for the beeb a shoutout for either F1Tech or TheMinister would be just hunkydory.