segedunum wrote:Just_a_fan wrote:And you think the effect of a crosswinf on the McLaren will be any worse than on cars running shark fins?
Yes. What McLaren have with the shallow parts of their sidepods is
an area where air can be compressed, slowed and where multiple changes in direction can take place. You need to make sure you completely understand what happens there. You also have to remember that McLaren are counting on these shallow sidepods to create a clean and uninterrupted flow of air to the back of the car. They can't afford it to be disrupted in any way otherwise they will lose downforce.
This, and some comments you made in the Renault thread, indicate you may misunderstand basic fluid dynamics. I am only a layman and can tell you that in subsonic conditions you won't find the air being 'compressed' anywhere.
The fact that oncoming air can take the shortest route to the rear of the car is the exact advantage of the system. Other cars are pursuing alternatives, such as highly sculpted sidepods or deep undercut. And far from 'slowing the air down', the system apparently works to minimise any changes in air velocity by allowing the flow to pass unimpeded. Why should this be difficult for them to understand?
Your theory that in yaw these top cuts are somehow deeply prone to losing all effect is so far completely unfounded. The crux of your point is that any unnecessary surface area is badness - were you born after the 2008 season?
In short, you have a lot of variables that are ripe to create unpredictable instability several steps down the line. If McLaren have been able to account for these and it works well then great but it's something we've not seen on cars in the past, probably for good reason. These sidepods are probably going to change dramatically in shape though as McLaren understand the whole concept in practice.
Okay so two points:
1. Relatively clean air passing by as unimpeded as possible is somehow less stable than air that has to work around the tub, sidepods and several tyres before doing the bulk of its useful work? I guess that's "obvious" to you, but to the rest of us it is a non sequiter.
2. Thank you for giving a ripe example of your overwhelming bias with the "probably for good reason" comment. Such comments have not been made about Renault's exhaust, which you admire (and why not), nor Red Bull's spectacular innovations over the last few years that have set the benchmark for all to follow.
You are quickly becoming the joke of this forum.