gcdugas wrote:DaveKillens wrote:Dcdugas, then please explain why an eductor can work the way it does? It's because the high velocity fluid coming from the central nozzle entrains the fluid surrounding it, and draw it along. This is the concept I am trying to sell.
http://www.1877eductors.com/tank.htm
Just replace the central nozzle with the exhaust pipes, and the secondary, larger bellmouth with the diffuser, or wing structure.
The exhaust isn't going that much faster than the normal wind because it isn't that focused by the time it nears the wing. Moreover it is still pointing up! It would have to go signifigantly faster than the air stream and it would have to be largely horizontal. The 500 km/h figure is highly dubious, but even if it were near that it, if it spreads from 80mm to just 160mm by the rear wing, then it would be going only 125 km/h (slower than the airstream), and it would be filling the low pressure zone under the wing element, thus negating it somewhat.
In your link they are talking about liquids which are different than gasses because gasses are compressable and liquids aren't to any appreciable degree. The effect described in that link is related to the ventury effect. However if it were possible for a focussed stream to be passing through a low pressure zone with a
signifigant delta in velocity, then it could "punch through" the low pressure zone and drag surrounding air with it thus lowering the pressure even more but we are talking huge deltas (3X-4X minimum) in velocity and a very focussed stream in order to achieve the effect otherwise the low pressure zone will destroy the focus of the faster stream and increase in pressure. It has to be faster by enough to "punch through" the low pressure zone and it has to maintain its focus.
There are two principles you are totally failing to grasp. You CAN add air mass to a system and decrease pressure, so long as the mass flow out of that system adjusts to account for that influx.
And INDUCTION pump works just like the exhaust pipes would. I actually have real, tangible lab data from an induction experiment I did last year. Let me know if you want to see it. Basically, when you turn on the engine, you spew VERY fast moving exhaust gas, at VERY low pressure into a flow. The exhaust gas, or jet flow, is low enough in pressure to lower the pressure of adjacent air, and the shear layer between the slow and fast air speeds up the slow flow. It works and I can prove it with an experiment I did.
The other thing is circulation control. You may think the exhaust "dirties" the air, but it may very well clean it up. The exhaust gas flowing out has become a streamline of the flow, and the flow field around it will now change in a way that may very well help the rear wing. Google "circulation control wing" or circulation control. It is a hot aerodynamic topic and it's been introduced on things from planes, to submarines, to semi trucks.
As to whoever mentioned continuity and momentum, thanks for showing that there are people on this board with a legitimate understanding of the fundamentals!