atanatizante wrote:Some questions:
1.Why RB has cascade winglets/flaps at the point where the FW is flexing?
2.Where is the point with maximum drag or pressure on the FW?
3.Could they put ballast/weight underneath or above the FW?
4.Where is the best place to put it?
5.Could this ballast/weight (alone or in addition to the cascade winglets/flaps) increase the effect of flexing the FW?
6.Could they put ballast/weight after the FIA tested the FW?
Thanx in advance!
1. For more downforce... it's not there to impede the test. Red Bull has to make an adapter to ensure the force is applied in the right spot.
2. You can't really break it down like that... although just past the leading edge of the wing on the underside has the lowest pressure/highest air-speed.
3. Ballast that far from the centre of the car would be counter-productive, as the further weight is from the centre of rotation, the harder it is to get the car to rotate (inertia... conservation of angular momentum).
4. Down low, near the middle of the car (that's why the splitter is the most popular spot).
5. Not really, as it is just the increase of force due to the air that causes flex; it's just the addition of that 500N of force that does the flexing, otherwise the added weight would flex the wing itself.
6. I doubt it; the wing needs to be tested as-is, as far as I know.
scotty86 wrote:but exactly how possible is it that Red Bull use heat affected materials and the principle of aerodynamic heating to achieve the resulting wing bending that they do?
"Aerodynamic heating is a concern for supersonic and hypersonic aircraft."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerodynamic_heating
(When in doubt, google it)