Believe me i would love to test all of those parameters! but i have no time!n smikle wrote: What about the relationship between your groove depth and body size? (length width etc).. what about the profile of the grooves? sharp round etc...
Believe me i would love to test all of those parameters! but i have no time!n smikle wrote: What about the relationship between your groove depth and body size? (length width etc).. what about the profile of the grooves? sharp round etc...
not unless you area magically making your groves ignore the definition of a wetted area. if you do an equal depth to width you are doubling your wetted area. Not to mention you now have 100s more leading edges.n smikle wrote:Nope.. you are DECREASING the area. think very carefully about it...flynfrog wrote:Seriously how do you think there would be less skin drag? Increasing wetted area almost always results in increase in drag.
what if you had groves, golf ball dimples, and vortex generators you could have - drag then right?
AFAIK, Whales use grooves on their fins to prevent spanwise flow migration.Jersey Tom wrote:Let's rewind: What's the purpose of the grooves on the whale?
That means you can't make a conlusion yet. With fluids things are not so straight forward. When I get the time i will try to set up a model and see what happens.. In my mind I think the drag can be reduced.. but it will take finding the right geometrical proportions that make it work.amouzouris wrote:Believe me i would love to test all of those parameters! but i have no time!n smikle wrote: What about the relationship between your groove depth and body size? (length width etc).. what about the profile of the grooves? sharp round etc...
I mentioned it earlier. The grooves allow the mouth and throat to expand to take in a greater amount of sea water. They don't serve a hydrodynamic function.Pierce89 wrote:AFAIK, Whales use grooves on their fins to prevent spanwise flow migration.Jersey Tom wrote:Let's rewind: What's the purpose of the grooves on the whale?
Dimples as on golf balls increase the boundary layer and, with a nonrotating, knuckleball condition, increase drag. However, when a golf ball rotates backspin wise, it creates lift by increasing pressure under the ball while decreasing it at the top and causes the ball to travel further. Highly skilled golfers like me can even rotate the spin axis 90Β° such that the ball takes a right turn after rather short travel.n smikle wrote:Nope.. you are DECREASING the area. think very carefully about it...flynfrog wrote:Seriously how do you think there would be less skin drag? Increasing wetted area almost always results in increase in drag.
what if you had groves, golf ball dimples, and vortex generators you could have - drag then right?
If you'll read, I said the grooves on their fins, not their throatsNo Lotus wrote:I mentioned it earlier. The grooves allow the mouth and throat to expand to take in a greater amount of sea water. They don't serve a hydrodynamic function.Pierce89 wrote:AFAIK, Whales use grooves on their fins to prevent spanwise flow migration.Jersey Tom wrote:Let's rewind: What's the purpose of the grooves on the whale?
Whales don't have grooves on their fins and the question and thread refer to the grooves on the venters of rorquals.Pierce89 wrote:If you'll read, I said the grooves on their fins, not their throatsNo Lotus wrote:I mentioned it earlier. The grooves allow the mouth and throat to expand to take in a greater amount of sea water. They don't serve a hydrodynamic function.Pierce89 wrote: AFAIK, Whales use grooves on their fins to prevent spanwise flow migration.
Perhaps a large vertical fin on a whale takes to much energy to operate when on the surface and in air.riff_raff wrote:Hydrodynamics are not the same as aerodynamics. Compressible fluids do not behave the same as incompressible fluids.
Another thing to consider is why do marine mammals, like whales and dolphins, have horizontal tail fins for propulsion, while marine fishes have vertical tail fins for propulsion?
a mamal spine is different from fish spine. we bend your knees forward and back not side to side .riff_raff wrote:Hydrodynamics are not the same as aerodynamics. Compressible fluids do not behave the same as incompressible fluids.
Another thing to consider is why do marine mammals, like whales and dolphins, have horizontal tail fins for propulsion, while marine fishes have vertical tail fins for propulsion?