Sorry, you are right. I only skimmed it. As a technical exercise I find the idea proposed to be most interesting; especially in regards to the theory in how such an implementation could potentially attempt to minimize the effect of dirty air in order to allow for better overtaking opportunities...flynfrog wrote:Phil maybe try reading the thread before posting?
Unfortunate that you plucked things out of thin air trying to put words in my mouth.Greg Locock wrote:"If the fan does indeed fail though, you will have no less downforce than before." No, it only helps cornering if the fan generates more downforce than the passive aero. Hence the downvote. So, you are cornering at 5g, 1g from the fan, fan fails, and you have a grip deficit of 1g. You figure it out genius.
But anyway, to address something that was obvious for everyone else, yes there will be a loss in grip if the fans fails. There might even be a slide for a moment as the downforce on the tyres reduce. To determine the magnitude of the slide some sort of calculation or simulation has to be done to see how the speed of the car and it's radius through the corner changes as the extra down-force is taken away. If the grip from the tyre cannot support the speed,I suspect the car will slide to a larger radius until the speed comes down to manageable level. I have no detailed idea how this plays out though. I guess you can enlighten us?This are less likely to happen than a failed DRS. If the fan does indeed fail though, you will have no less downforce than before.. in fact your diffuser will be now functioning as double diffuser. (I did not mention the ducts that lead up to the fan). There will be more than enough downforce to make the corner.
In the "Gordon Murray Story" video Murray says he had to re-calculate the Brabham fan cars downforce a few times as the figures were astronomical and he didn't believe them at first. He also says "the fan car could get as much downforce standing still as it did at 180Mph" , "Which means you could get a 2G standing start ,and go round hairpin bends just as quick as you could 150mph bends. Which gave a massive advantage."Greg Locock wrote:"If the fan does indeed fail though, you will have no less downforce than before." No, it only helps cornering if the fan generates more downforce than the passive aero. Hence the downvote. So, you are cornering at 5g, 1g from the fan, fan fails, and you have a grip deficit of 1g. You figure it out genius.
DRS is a huge loss of down-force and huge shift in aero balance to the front. On the other hand if the fan fails, your total car downforce won't drop as much and the overall aero balance will likewise not shift as far forwards. I can hazard a guess, but I would have to make a good estimate on down-force loss and shift in balance in both cases to say the car would totally lose it. I don't feel it would be as catastrophic, I feel the car would just go wide than swap ends.sgth0mas wrote:The car will simply lose it in the turn. Thats another reason why you want the speed aids on straights...its much safer.
Do you remember what happened when Nasr accidentally opened drs while simply warming his tires in canada? And that was on a straight...imagine losing it in a turn while trying to pass someone.
So its enough downforce to makeup for wing wash, but its not enough to matter if you lose it...especially while using as a passing aid mid turn?PlatinumZealot wrote:DRS is a huge loss of down-force and huge shift in aero balance to the front. On the other hand if the fan fails, your total car downforce won't drop as much and the overall aero balance will likewise not shift as far forwards. I can hazard a guess, but I would have to make a good estimate on down-force loss and shift in balance in both cases to say the car would totally lose it. I don't feel it would be as catastrophic, I feel the car would just go wide than swap ends.sgth0mas wrote:The car will simply lose it in the turn. Thats another reason why you want the speed aids on straights...its much safer.
Do you remember what happened when Nasr accidentally opened drs while simply warming his tires in canada? And that was on a straight...imagine losing it in a turn while trying to pass someone.
Even still, I don't think anything is wrong with the car losing it per say. Any part failure in the corners can cause a car to lose it.
Not an engineer assertion eithersgth0mas wrote: but im 110% sure