There's little expansion under, over, or behind an f1 car. We're well below mach 0.3 and thus incompressible is a valid assumption. The compressibility effects are not dominant and would only warrant investigation after the incompressible flow model is perfected. The air is filling the wake via a high flow rate under the car, not expansion.richard_leeds wrote:Not forgetting the compressibility of water relative to air. That would make it hard to model the air expansion under the floor and diffuser.
in 2006 Racecar Engineering did an article saying QinetiQ has a tie-up with Williams. maybe they dumped Sir Frank.PNSD wrote:Few teams have tried to implement PIV which is why they have pretty much all gone to Toyota.shelly wrote:Toyota wind tunnel (now used by Ferrari I think) has the capability for PIV, which is a wind tunnel technique that gives full flow field visualisation which can be put in direct comparison with pictures from cfd.
See here:
http://www.tecplot.com/Community/CaseSt ... veeng.aspx
I think for some time toyota's has been the only F1 wind tunnel with such capability (which needs a lot of extra machinery compared to a normal wind tunnel); I do not know if now some other team can do PIV (except from ferrari using toyota's knowledge, of course)
PIV is costly, and time consuming to setup. F1 teams do not have time. In the past they have paid for external companies to do such work, coming in, installing their equipment in the respective teams tunnel etc. But as I said, F1 teams can not afford the time or cost for such setups.
Only Toyota could, and only Toyota had the people I believe. However im sure situation has changed and teams do have the capabilities...
With regards to the topic, UK users will im sure heard of a company known as QinetiQ? They are from the aerospace sector. There was a rumour circulating that the Mclaren MP4-25 did indeed have some water channel testing done by these guys.
Water channel testing is not uncommon within the automotive industry due to the Reynolds number effects. Obviously wind tunnels can only run a certain sustainable speed and automotive models can only practically be a certain size meaning more often than not due to cost reasons it can be difficult to achieve complete similarity.... Hence the use of water channels.
With the compressibility, do we have an idea of the flow velocity entering the floor? That is where the peak velocity will be located, but I doubt that velocity will exceed mach 0.3 for most applications where the teams are interested in the flow features. For that reason I would assume compressibility is negligible for these cases.
Im not so sure that still exists.Pierce89 wrote: in 2006 Racecar Engineering did an article saying QinetiQ has a tie-up with Williams. maybe they dumped Sir Frank.
Lot of water channels are used with PIV. easier to seed the PIV particles and they can be dissolved using chlorine. I believe this is a bit harder in air..gixxer_drew wrote:...
Second, water tunnels have been used for decades for vehicle stuff. AAR for example has one in California, it is a tow type where the model is in motion through a stable medium. The big advantage in my mind of water is to get the reynolds number in scale. It also does an amazing job with flow visualization for things like vortex generators. Hope that helps
-Andrew Brilliant
Well viscosity and density are computed based on a specific time of the day. While doing a normal wind tunnel test, Cl and Cd are monitored. The Reynolds number is later adjusted to map the variations.shelly wrote:Do you hin at pressure tempertaure changes to tweak Reynolds or other tricks such as boundary layer tripping?Sonic59 wrote:There are methodics, that increase effective reynolds number.shelly wrote:The irony is that with 60% scale model and 250kph top speed F1 wind tunnel do not match real car's Reynolds number for speed greater than 150kph
Thank you Callum!Callum wrote:Welcome to the forum gixxer!
Yup, engineering is rarely ever absolute. A key lesson when I started out was that analysis & testing is informative as to how how something might work. The various combinations and scenarios gives plausible envelopes, but they are probabilistic and we never truly know exactly what is happening.gixxer_drew wrote:So for now I think the best guys take in all the information they can get, try every type of tunnel and work to learn something from any place you can. Then hope you put it all together in your head and hope you get it right.