Here I go again…
Something I came up with last night.
Imagine duct at outer side of each endplate feeding the upper blade of the wing assembly with air. That upper blade has transversal/full width aperture on top.
My question is: - would the air fed in by duct exiting under pressure on top of the blade at 90 degrees act as virtual gurney flap relative to main air stream hitting the top of the blade? If so, wouldn’t such solution increase downforce and decrease drag (relative to conventional gurney flap) as well and narrow stream at the rear end of the car?
In addition, while I was thinking about it, it came to me that upper blade should be hollow all the way but with divider in the middle of it. This divider would prevent decrease of pressure in turns and naturally put pressure (more downforce) on same side of the wing as the specific turn (more grip to side of the car with tendecy to go up). Duct would also increase stability because side wind would have less effect on endplate. Also, the aperture could be shaped in a way that air exits only at certain spots (more exiting near the endplate to increase aero efficiency and downforce).
Any comment is welcomed.