hi buddy! How ya been? Good to see you here. Yes, I fully agree with what you've said. Something that resembles a diffuser top surface but is the same profile on both models would tell us more and should increase downforce levels for the diffuser as well as the upper surface itself.miqi23 wrote:@DRCorsa,you are making the mistake of running the setup in isolation, try including a region above the diffuser section that produces an upwash and the interaction should produce a much better representation.
We haven't come yet to a conclusion as to which type of diffuser ie best for an F1 car. We are trying -through primitive analysis- to find the reason why F1 teams have chosen the concave (or bell) over to the convex one. The fact that still the convex is better for that simple analysis, proves that there is an interaction that makes it better.miqi23 wrote:@DRCorsa,you are making the mistake of running the setup in isolation, try including a region above the diffuser section that produces an upwash and the interaction should produce a much better representation.
The thing is that each design is unique and they work with the rest of the car in place. You will also need to consider the issue of ride height and rake angles and you will be able to get a better feel of what you have drawn.DRCorsa wrote:I've a.lready designed this, which i think is way closer to an actual F1 floor but i am not sure how i should run it in CFD. Do you think that i should run it as it is with air flowing both on top and bottom surfaces, or it could be better to make its upper surface flat as in the previous experiment?
Do you propose considering all things at once? How do we learn from that? How do we know if mistakes have been made? If we test step by step, we gain knowledge at each step. We take that knowledge to the next step and if the results do not make sense with what has gone before, we examine for reasons or mistakes.miqi23 wrote:[
The thing is that each design is unique and they work with the rest of the car in place. You will also need to consider the issue of ride height and rake angles and you will be able to get a better feel of what you have drawn.
I would suggest 4 tires, the floor and a body to approximate an F1 car. It could be a bluff body with mods such as a cutout to emulate a raised nose with tea tray and tapered tail. You can learn a lot from that.hardingfv32 wrote:Do you propose considering all things at once? How do we learn from that? How do we know if mistakes have been made? If we test step by step, we gain knowledge at each step. We take that knowledge to the next step and if the results do not make sense with what has gone before, we examine for reasons or mistakes.miqi23 wrote:[
The thing is that each design is unique and they work with the rest of the car in place. You will also need to consider the issue of ride height and rake angles and you will be able to get a better feel of what you have drawn.
Ride height and rake angles in relation to the diffuser would be good.
These test work just fine using a simple fixed bluff test body. Trying to recreate the flows in front of the diffuser is way beyond what anyone on the forum can do in CFD (or demonstrated they can do).
Brian
Brianhardingfv32 wrote:DRCorsa
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Here is some data that I found. I am not sure how it correlates to our discussion. What is the harm to our F1 system of a low pressure recovery?
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Good work, but your convex diffuser could be much, much better. I suggest you try a straight line diffuser (within the FIA specs of course) as your "control."DRCorsa wrote:I REPOST THE RESULTS OF THE "BELL SHAPED" NEXT TO THE CONVEX DIFFUSER ADDING DOWNFORCE-DRAG FIGURES
"BELL" DIFFUSER
Downforce: 1381N
Drag: 220N
CONVEX DIFFUSER
Downforce: 1705N
Drag: 259N