richard_leeds wrote:
The objective of the under floor rake and diffuser is to expand the air flow to generate low pressure, hence downforce. Pumping exhaust into the diffuser near the rear of the car prevents stalling, and the velocity of the injected exhaust speeds up the air flow. The heat also causes the wake to expand, further decreasing air density and hence pressure (and annoying the following car).
The diffuser ramp actually increases the pressure. I know it might sight slightly counter-intuitive, but the purpose of the diffuser (and its geometric expansion) is to increase the static pressure of the underbody flow back up to atmospheric pressure. The low static pressure under the floor is (which is what creates the downforce) is created at two points. First is the floor LE, which acts like a throat and accelerates the air which is being pulled in (it acts just like a constriction in a converging-diverging tunnel system). This acceleration brings the static pressure down below that of atmospheric pressure.
The second point of low pressure creation is the diffuser kink line just ahead of the diffuser ramp. This sharp curvature accelerates the air and you get a strong local suction region. The flow then expands into the diffuser itself, and its static pressure is raised as it nears the diffuser TE.
Yes, pumping exhaust into the diffuser itself adds momentum to the flow. As you say, this delays diffuser stall, and more importantly, allows a more aggressive diffuser profile to be used (which will allow more local suction to be created). In an ideal world this would also allow you to raise the diffuser TE height, but this is of course limited by the regulations.
The blown diffusers of last year actually didn't really blow that much air into the diffuser itself. Some designs did blow exhaust through the starter motor hole, but the main benefit was to blow exhaust along the outboard edge of the ramp - the primary effect of this was to change the inboard tyre squirt.
richard_leeds wrote:Pumping air in at the front of the floor will have a different effect. As someone else has noted above, the air is sucked by the diffuser, not pushed from the front.
The under floor effects (ie rake) will have created some reduction of pressure under the driver's seat, pumping gasses in there will simply fill the void cancelling out any low pressure. I can't see how ramming more air under the floor at the front helps.
Yes, strictly speaking the diffuser controls the mass flow. However, the floor of an F1 car is not a closed system and so as I explained in my earlier post, can not be considered in such simple terms. The floor vortex system has a significant effect, and this is affected by several other things in addition to the diffuser expansion.
I don't think you really understand what is mean by low (static) pressure. There is no "void" so to speak... by blowing air into the region you do not "cancel out" the low pressure. In fact, by blowing high velocity, energetic flow (high total pressure!) you actually further decrease the low static pressure along the streamlines.
richard_leeds wrote:However, the killer the argument against pumping air under the floor is that the exhausts are facing outwards. If they were intended to feed the floor, they would face inwards wouldn't they? That's the evidence, Renault chose to push the air out to the side, not under the car.
So, I tend to agree the prime function is to create a virtual skirt along the floor edge.
The exhaust nozzles may be facing outwards in a geometric sense, but I don't think the flow ends up along the outboard edges of the floor. The flow at the floor LE has a significant, natural y-component due various reasons (the FW flap vortex is one of them, which, due to its counter-clockwise sense generates a lot of outwash ahead of the sidepod), but the flow ends up being pulled back in to flow under the floor. I realise it may not look like it from the pictures of the car, and it is pretty hard to show this without some flow-vis or CFD results.
The exhaust exits are facing outwards because they are aimed at the rounded LE of the floor. The profile of this LE is curved (this is related to the outwash in this region) and as a result, in order to maximize the acceleration of the air about this surface you want the oncoming flow to hit it perpendicular to the section.
Anyway, i think I'm starting to ramble a bit now