by http://www.flickr.com/photos/allmotorsport/
The rear wing would stall and while the front wing wouldn't quite so quickly, the aero balance would be out.bhallg2k wrote:Otherwise, what prevents teams from just cranking up the angles of attack on the front and rear wings and leaving it at that?
The bargeboard is a multi-element wing producing nothing but dragbhallg2k wrote:What specifically makes you say that?
I think those downstream effects are pretty important, yanno? There's no reason to create drag just to create drag.kilcoo316 wrote:The bargeboard is a multi-element wing producing nothing but dragbhallg2k wrote:What specifically makes you say that?
- or forces towards the outside of the corner.
[well, it also creates downstream effects - but leaving that aside for a moment ]
Not in yaw (when it would actually matter).raymondu999 wrote:Wouldn't the centripetal effects provided by the sidewrds "lift" be counteracted by the other bargeboard though?
They are taking the drag hit for further downforce due to the wake - hence my point on the relative importance of downforce compared to drag.bhallg2k wrote:I think those downstream effects are pretty important, yanno? There's no reason to create drag just to create drag.
Yep, but multi-elements offset flow detachment.bhallg2k wrote:by default, they have a pretty high AoA, one that would seem to cause airflow along the rear of the bargeboard to separate if the bargeboard is too big.
No, but they do produce far more lift.bhallg2k wrote: Moreover, don't slotted wings produce less drag than their solid counterparts?
I would say that statement is completely incorrect.bhallg2k wrote:Naturally, the bargeboards produce drag, just like anything else, but it's not nearly as much drag as would be produced if free stream airflow was allowed to smack the face of the sidepods unguarded
Either way, I can see that my "knowledge" is incomplete here. Thanks, guys. +1s all around. (Don't spend it all in one place.)Scarbs wrote:[...]
Bargeboards play a key role in directing the flow around the front of the car, [they] effectively route the flow between the front wheels around the car, flow inside (green) of the boards is routed into the sidepod intakes and around the outside of the sidepods, while the dirtier flow (brown) on the outside of the bargeboards is kept clear of critical aerodynamic surfaces. This shaping of the flow inside the barge boards helps the flow negotiate the tricky interface between the step and sidepods.
Very cool to see that bit, because I've had the thought elsewhere. I couldn't really get any input on it, because it seems no one pays much attention to the Ferrari this year.kilcoo316 wrote:[...]
The radiator will have a pressure drop across it which, combined with the rad ducting geometry will determine how much massflow passes through the sidepod at any given speed/air temp - the rest will know by the pressure perturbations back upstream to divert around the sidepod. Clever design around the sidepod inlet can lead to local thrust being produced
[...]
True, a multi element front wing produces less drag than a single element front wing of the SAME SIZE, with almost same levels of downforcebhallg2k wrote: Moreover, don't slotted wings produce less drag than their solid counterparts?
Happy as hell to be educated here.