R1ceboy32 wrote:... its going to be hard to keep that gap open when a load is started to be applied to the trailedge. How is an F1 wing made anyway, is it just a foam core with a carbon laminate or a totally different process?
Airplanes have a duct that goes through the first wing element and a slot on its trailing edge, you don't need to make a hollow wing. Airplane wings are made of aluminium: for example, the Antonov military cargo plane (I think, please correct me) has a similar system and it has no carbon fiber wings.
flynfrog wrote:one problem i see with this using exaust gas is that now your down force its heavily relient on throttle posistion so if a dirver backs out of it in a turn things go bad
Allright, add a compressed air tank between the exhaust turbocharged air and the wing. Probably a bad idea, as the flow is really high and the weight of the system would be high too.
But, anyway, blown flaps are useful only on landings, they take away too much power on the take off.
This is not a problem, but an advantage in a car: you get more downforce in the back while you are braking, simply by keeping the revs high. A simple valve can change things and stop the flow while you are accelerating. What you get here is a brilliant idea: you can change the properties of the wing, not by changing the wing itself but by improving the flow of air.
This is a system that you can even modulate to keep the car from having under/oversteering! And the rules are impotent about it.
I would call it the "ultimate unflexiwing"...