I'm no aerodynamicist, but perhaps there's a way to overload the diffuser, result in reduced downforce and...greater top end speed!wesley123 wrote:why would it stall the diffuser? and part 2, how you know that? you are the first person to say thatThe FOZ wrote:For all we know, that duct is stalling the diffuser, not the rear wing...
I think I understand where you are coming from. It is becaue people usually equate drag and down-force and this is not the truth. It really depends on the shape of the object and the properties of the air around the object. Even though the floor adds a lot of downforce, the floor is almost horizontal so It barely impedes the air which is also flowing horizontally. So it does not add much drag.The FOZ wrote:I'm no aerodynamicist, but perhaps there's a way to overload the diffuser, result in reduced downforce and...greater top end speed!wesley123 wrote:why would it stall the diffuser? and part 2, how you know that? you are the first person to say thatThe FOZ wrote:For all we know, that duct is stalling the diffuser, not the rear wing...
My reasoning was slightly different. As downforce increases, the car is pushed (or pulled) downwards. Proximity to the ground affects the aerodynamics of the car. Less downforce should mean less pull/push downwards on the suspension, so the car is higher off the ground, which should result in less drag. Or am I completely backwards on that one? Hrm...apparently being closer to the ground minimizes the formation of wingtip vortices...n smikle wrote:I think I understand where you are coming from. It is becaue people usually equate drag and down-force and this is not the truth. It really depends on the shape of the object and the properties of the air around the object. Even though the floor adds a lot of downforce, the floor is almost horizontal so It barely impedes the air which is also flowing horizontally. So it does not add much drag.
What do ou think that happens when the diffuser stalls?The FOZ wrote:My reasoning was slightly different. As downforce increases, the car is pushed (or pulled) downwards. Proximity to the ground affects the aerodynamics of the car. Less downforce should mean less pull/push downwards on the suspension, so the car is higher off the ground, which should result in less drag. Or am I completely backwards on that one? Hrm...apparently being closer to the ground minimizes the formation of wingtip vortices...n smikle wrote:I think I understand where you are coming from. It is becaue people usually equate drag and down-force and this is not the truth. It really depends on the shape of the object and the properties of the air around the object. Even though the floor adds a lot of downforce, the floor is almost horizontal so It barely impedes the air which is also flowing horizontally. So it does not add much drag.
I may be backwards on this one. Or am I?
I think I understand where you are coming from. It is becaue people usually equate drag and down-force and this is not the truth. It really depends on the shape of the object and the properties of the air around the object. Even though the floor adds a lot of downforce, the floor is almost horizontal so It barely impedes the air which is also flowing horizontally. So it does not add much drag.
A wing is different as you know, since they are usually angled into the air stream, they impede the air. So people can usually guess that a high angled wing (which makes much downforce) has much drag. So that is why some people follow the notion that down-force brings drag, which is not the whole story.
n smikle wrote:Well, I am saying that the way the diffuser makes drag is different from the wings. I am not too sure that the diffuser stalls similar to a wing. But I can see where:
1. It can bottom out, by coming down to the slow moving boundary layer.
2. If it has a bad curvature, it can cause some turbulence in the "cone" at low speeds.
3. Excessive air can enter under the floor and blow the car off the track.
But talking about drag, the main thing is this:
The nature of a diffuser is that it creates a gradual increase in pressure from the the throat up to the pressure at the exit. This is inherent in the shape of the diffuser.
The majority of the drag from the diffuser comes from this pressure at its exit vs the pressure at the front of the car. This pressure at the exit is just whatever pressure is behind the car.
So no matter what you do under the car, the shape of the diffuser will try to bring the pressure up to whatever pressure is at it's exit.
So to say the duct is stalling the diffuser.... Maybe you can say that the duct is just reducing the pressure behind the diffuser and behind the car in general.
This is how Sauber have used the blown wing in the past (to prevent airflow separation from the wing) - lets them run a steeper wing angle, thus more downforce.Asphalt_World wrote: Therefore, turn this situation upside down and a car going slow round corners would not create much down force because the airspeed over the wing is slower. Allowing extra air to pass through the middle of the wing or behind it in some other way would reduce 'stall' and make the wing more efficient, thus pushing the car down on the ground more.
So, Macca run a setup with less wing giving them a straight line speed advantage but due to this anti stall system create as much down force as a higher wing setting on a normal rear wing system.