Ok... ...Adrian Newby wrote:n smikle wrote:Air Dams can have vents. It's just a vent in the air dam.bhallg2k wrote:
Otherwise known as a vent?
Yes, exactly, a vent. Newey is venting that high pressure air into the chassis to "cool the driver" and then exiting it through the cockpit opening.
hardingfv32 wrote:Adrian Newby wrote:Nope. I think clean, high-energy airflow between the front tires is more important to Adrian Newey than drag on top of the nose, or inside a vent.
The question is what is the most effecient way to handle the step on the top nose surface.
A vent that routes the air around the internal suspension components and the tightly packaged driver or the Ferrari's ramp nose?
Brian
Most things that are water cooled are also air cooled, engines (radiators) being a prime example.hardingfv32 wrote:Expand please, your point is not clear.Adrian Newby wrote:What is the requirement for air flow if an engine is water cooled?
Brian
Why would Adrian Newey make a midget 3/4 inch tall pseudo air dam who's effect wouldn't be any larger than a simple ramp (like Ferrari's), and which would spill air over the sides into air flow he was trying to keep clean?gilgen wrote: Has anybody obtained any proof that there is actually a vent here? But even if there is a vent for drver cooling, the outlet can be a lot smaller than the inlet, thus creating an airdam, and smoothing the airflow over the hump.
So, what is the main concern when discussing the TOP surface of the nose?Adrian Newby wrote:Your second sentence implies you are still thinking the main concern is drag. And it isn't.
So then it is your thesis that this air flow is fed to a air/water heat exchanger that services the KERS unit under the fuel cell?Adrian Newby wrote:Most things that are water cooled are also air cooled, engines (radiators) being a prime example.
That it not foul up the air flow on the sides, especially in the area between the tires.hardingfv32 wrote:So, what is the main concern when discussing the TOP surface of the nose?Adrian Newby wrote:Your second sentence implies you are still thinking the main concern is drag. And it isn't.
Brian
Well, I just needed something of the right order, but yeah, I guess the distance from the nose tip is better. I don't think my Reynolds number would be too different still.volarchico wrote:Why would we use the nose height as the length scale?
So I guess the question I have is whether the boundary layer under the nose is turbulent or laminar? More desirable to have a laminar one, I would think, for air quality approaching the floor. So, do they trip the boundary layer deliberately? Or will the vortices from the wings do this?volarchico wrote:Using turbulent boundary layer equation...
EDIT: Image of profile:
I don't have a "thesis" regarding any particular cooling method once the air gets to the KERS unit/battery pack. I did not bring up water cooling, you did.hardingfv32 wrote:So then it is your thesis that this air flow is fed to a air/water heat exchanger that services the KERS unit under the fuel cell?Adrian Newby wrote:Most things that are water cooled are also air cooled, engines (radiators) being a prime example.
Brian
Because Neweys answer could trap air, and cause a more streamlined flow over the nose, as shown in earlier simulations in this thread. Ferraris bump will change the airflow twice, and is more likely to create drag.Adrian Newby wrote:Why would Adrian Newey make a midget 3/4 inch tall pseudo air dam who's effect wouldn't be any larger than a simple ramp (like Ferrari's), and which would spill air over the sides into air flow he was trying to keep clean?gilgen wrote: Has anybody obtained any proof that there is actually a vent here? But even if there is a vent for drver cooling, the outlet can be a lot smaller than the inlet, thus creating an airdam, and smoothing the airflow over the hump.
gilgen wrote:Because Neweys answer could trap air, and cause a more streamlined flow over the nose, as shown in earlier simulations in this thread. Ferraris bump will change the airflow twice, and is more likely to create drag.Adrian Newby wrote:Why would Adrian Newey make a midget 3/4 inch tall pseudo air dam who's effect wouldn't be any larger than a simple ramp (like Ferrari's), and which would spill air over the sides into air flow he was trying to keep clean?gilgen wrote: Has anybody obtained any proof that there is actually a vent here? But even if there is a vent for drver cooling, the outlet can be a lot smaller than the inlet, thus creating an airdam, and smoothing the airflow over the hump.