Going out as soon as the session restarted.
via Lotus F1 Team
Sorry, what part of what is illegal?Joie de vivre wrote:Isn't that illegal? I mean the little bridge over Williams exhaust was illegal, this is not?
Craig Scarborough @ScarbsF1
@andystobart of @Lotus_F1Team confirmed that the covered exhaust was just an aero test, not a new idea to be raced.
Most innovative feature seen this winter, after williams blown wheels? Never seen a bargeboard remotely similar to that.Blackout wrote:Look at that slotted bargeboard. Like a stairway
http://www7.pic-upload.de/03.03.13/rjgy5w4dvxz.jpg
http://www7.pic-upload.de/03.03.13/ivvo2hly19s.jpg
I wrote "footplate vortex" but I should have written "diffuser footplate vortex", meaning the vortex that develops aroud the diffuser edge, like a wing tip vortex, because of the pressure differential between upper and lower surface. Air goes down veritcally in the gap between diffuser edge and rear wheel, arounf the diffuser edge.henra wrote:what you call footplate vortex is the one on the lower side of the floorplate I assume, i.e. the one created by the lower side of the bargeboard.shelly wrote: The vortex created from the strake is close to the footplate vortex, and is rotating in the opposite sense, Ideally you would like to blow the exhaust between these two voritces, in order to achieve the famous "sealing" effect
The vortex of the strake will ilkely add to the vortex created by the upper side of the barge board moving through the undercut alongside the sidepod and above the floorplate. This vortex will be rotating on the upper side to the inside of the car, thus in the opposite direction of the lower 'floorplate vortex'.
It would be interesting to see a high resoution CFD of the Ramp solution. I'm wondering how much of the upper side vortex (from the barge board) through the undercut will go into the tunnel and what happens to the remaining vortex: will it move straight ahead along the strake to the diffuser edge ? That's what I assume is the goal. But does it work that way?