Absolutely, I think that is the reason.
I wonder what they ultimately have in mind, or if they're still working on that!
You're pretty far off the mark there in terms of the magnitude of the issue. Every part on the car will create an aerodynamic moment. Some in the right direction, some in the wrong direction. With the aerodynamic CoP behind the CG, you will always have a stabilising moment in response to a yaw angle.segedunum wrote:...Higher sidepods create drag. When you have two parts of the same object that create differing amounts of drag (the higher and lower parts of the sidepod) you get a twisting force going on. In a straight line and when things are symmetrical this is probably OK, but I wondered out loud what would happen to the handling in yaw when you get differing amounts of drag and turbulent air across the car. [/i]
It is still very similar to the one featured by MP4/25 (late season)Carmack wrote:Yeah, forgot about that
Well,they shaped it in a quite unique way, very different to other cars.
matt21 wrote:
What is the thing inside the outlet?
Well sorry, but i don't think it is an exhaust...Derek wrote:matt21 wrote:
What is the thing inside the outlet?
It looks like two exhaust pipes one on top of the other could they be
blowing straight on to the beam wing ??
i agree, its mad of carbon.doopie2you wrote:Well sorry, but i don't think it is an exhaust...Derek wrote:matt21 wrote:
What is the thing inside the outlet?
It looks like two exhaust pipes one on top of the other could they be
blowing straight on to the beam wing ??
I don't think accelerating the air over the top surface of the car is what they want to do - my understanding is that this would reduce the pressure and lessen the downforce generated by the floor (the pressure difference between the two would be reduced).segedunum wrote:Still thinking out loud on the subject of those sidepods, and probably for my own benefit..... There's really two things you want to do with the air going towards the back of the car:
1. Get as large a volume of clear air to the back and to the diffuser as you can. That's why you see lots of extreme packaging solutions, new gearboxes and pull-rod suspensions these days.
2. Accelerate that air as best you can over your bodywork surfaces before reaching the rear of the car to ceate more downforce when it reaches there.
Now, with McLaren's sidepod arrangement they've obviously thought a lot about 1. They've made deep cuts into their sidpods to get a larger volume of air to the rear of the car. However, I can't see where they've thought about 2 - accelerating and energising that air as best they can. They've just got two straight channels as far as I can see without doing anything else.
On other cars with their sidepods and bodywork you see intricate curves and deep undercuts to try and create pressure points and accelerate most of that air as best they can before it reaches the rear of the car. Because of what McLaren have done they obviously can't curve the outer parts of their sidpods and create undercuts as other teams have done because they don't have the space.
It might well all work fine as long as they're doing something major with that volume of air once it reaches the back of the car, but they're asking a lot of whatever it is they're doing there.