And I find that extremely troubling, because they're not really my assertions.djos wrote:So bhall but no one else agrees with your assertions.
Sorry mate but I still think you are putting your own interpretation on what you are presenting and it isn't always imo valid. I'm not saying you a 100% wrong, just your spin on certain items doesn't seem to stack up. Admittedly my knowledge is limited, however I believe the arguments put forth by others are more logical.bhall II wrote:And I find that extremely troubling, because they're not really my assertions.djos wrote:So bhall but no one else agrees with your assertions.
Like most people, I don't own a wind tunnel. So, I have to learn through study, and the information I've presented here has been gleaned from research undertaken and/or compiled by highly respected individuals.
Among others, whoever disagrees with me actually disagrees with...
Xin Zhang, BSc, PhD, CEng, AFAIAA, FRAeS,
Airbus Professor of Aircraft Engineering at the University of Southampton
Willem Toet
former Head of Aerodynamics at Sauber, BMWSauber, BAR Honda, Ferrari,
engineer at Benetton
Jonathan Zerihan, PhD
aerodynamacist Team Leader at Mercedes AMG Petronas, Brawn GP, Honda Racing, BAR Honda
The blatant disregard for documentation in this thread has been absolutely --- astonishing!
The front wing is generally considered to be drag free in this regard because it is shadowed, in frontal area terms, by the vehicle behind. At Monza, where downforce is reduced because the trade off with straight line speed is more important, the rear wing is trimmed down to give a much smaller frontal area and thus drag. This works because the rear wing is mostly on its own in terms of frontal area. If you remove rear wing performance you must balance that with reduced front wing downforce or you have a very unbalanced car.Andres125sx wrote:Stupid teams, you should tell them they can save the effort of using specific wings for Monza, as they don´t reduce drag because frontal area is defined by the tyres and chasis...bhall II wrote:If replaced with a pair of venturi tunnels, it would have zero impact on frontal area, because that's defined by the tires and the chassis.
Which can be written as:timbo wrote: On fighter jets OTOH there's an excess of thrust and they are designed to be able to produce maximum lift ( =g-force for maneuver) and keep being controlled at highest AoAs.
Not strictly true.djos wrote:So bhall but no one else agrees with your assertions.
Priceless.djos wrote:Admittedly my knowledge is limited, however I believe the arguments put forth by others are more logical.
McCabism wrote:To understand front-wing ground effect, it's worth revisiting some research performed by Zhang, Zerihan, Ruhrmann and Deviese in the early noughties, Tip Vortices Generated By A Wing In Ground Effect. This examined a single-element wing in isolation from rotating wheels and other downstream appendages, but the results are still very relevant.
The principal point is that front-wing ground-effect depends upon two mechanisms: firstly, as the wing gets closer to the ground, a type of venturi effect occurs, accelerating the air between the ground and the wing to generate greater downforce. But in addition, a vortex forms underneath the end of the wing, close to the junction between the wing and the endplate, and this both produces downforce and keeps the boundary layer of the wing attached at a higher angle-of-attack.
The diagrams above show how this underwing vortex intensifies as the wing gets closer to the ground. In this regime, the downforce increases exponentially as the height of the wing is reduced. Beneath a certain critical height, however, the strength of the vortex reduces. Beneath this height, the downforce will continue to increase due to the venturi effect, but the rate of increase will be more linear. Eventually, at a very low height above the ground, the vortex bursts, the boundary layer separates from the suction surface, and the downforce actually reduces.
So, for a wing in isolation, the ground effect is fairly well understood.
Good post.bhall II wrote:If you'll recall the beginning of this discussion when I said that a tightly-regulated series can get away with simpler, more robust aerodynamic solutions, because they have little reason to fear runaway development, this is the embodiment of that reality...
http://i.imgur.com/miN5gOI.jpg
Vortices shed from the front wing end plates don't "seal" anything. They spin the wrong way for that.mrluke wrote:It makes sense that the teams will exploit this effect when they want to use vortices to seal the edges of the underbody anyway.
[...]
However I query whether relocating the source of the majority of the downforce nearer to the centre of the car would help the cars be less sensitive to dirty air, i.e. the dirty air would reduce the overall downforce but should maintain the overall balance. Overall though I think that active aero would be the best solution and would allow F1 cars to catch up with supercar technology..
As Djos said, nobody questioned those explanations and documentation, we´ve questioned your interpretation applied to current F1bhall II wrote:A fundamental misconception of ground effect aerodynamics has become an impassable bottleneck to this discussion. In fairness, it's not just you. But, we cannot proceed any further until it's rectified, and my onslaught of well-documented and illustrated explanations has apparently had zero impact in that regard.Andres125sx wrote:What´s the relevance to the thread?bhall II wrote:To get us back on the same page, will you please use as many details as possible to describe for me the various flow patterns around the front wing that create downforce? Let's see if we can avoid future misunderstandings.
Can you assert this without any doubt?bhall II wrote:If you'll recall the beginning of this discussion when I said that a tightly-regulated series can get away with simpler, more robust aerodynamic solutions, because they have little reason to fear runaway development, this is the embodiment of that reality...
http://i.imgur.com/miN5gOI.jpg
Just like a modern F1 wing, Honda's IndyCar wing is incapable of producing a force by way of anything other than the Venturi effect.
is different, it´s easy to see it´s been designed to work as a venturi tunnel with no flaps, or if those are called flaps too, they do not have the high AOA F1 flaps have.bhall II wrote:Just like a modern F1 wing, Honda's IndyCar wing...
No vortices mean no GE?bhall II wrote:...it's imperative for us to acknowledge that current F1 front wings are functionally identical to underbody venturis. They do not use vortices to "improve" ground effect; they use vortices, because that is ground effect. Until that's crystal clear to us all, there will continue to be a tendency to greatly overestimate the impact of "dirty air."Andres125sx wrote:Front wing vortices are used to improve GE...
I think aero has evolved too much to keep same direction. When DF was initially used, it was thanks to wings. Then GE were used... and banned, so rules tried to keep wings as main DF generators. But aero has evolved so much now they use wings, specially front one, in many different ways, but only as rules allow itAndres125sx wrote:..imagine if multi element wings are banned, max camber is limited, and to compensate that more freedom for floor design is allowed so true venturi tunnels can be used without the need of using front wing vortices to seal the floor and produce lift. Would that reduce dirty air?
ThisJust_a_fan wrote:The front wing is generally considered to be drag free in this regard because it is shadowed, in frontal area terms, by the vehicle behind. At Monza, where downforce is reduced because the trade off with straight line speed is more important, the rear wing is trimmed down to give a much smaller frontal area and thus drag. This works because the rear wing is mostly on its own in terms of frontal area. If you remove rear wing performance you must balance that with reduced front wing downforce or you have a very unbalanced car.Andres125sx wrote:Stupid teams, you should tell them they can save the effort of using specific wings for Monza, as they don´t reduce drag because frontal area is defined by the tyres and chasis...bhall II wrote:If replaced with a pair of venturi tunnels, it would have zero impact on frontal area, because that's defined by the tires and the chassis.
It really is quite simple.
Can you or can you not explain the basis for your opinion? Simply restating a thesis is not an explanation.Andres125sx wrote:IMO that´s a difference relevant to my previous explanation/question. That wing only work as a venturi tunnel, while F1 front wings also work as a wing.
Is the discussion only limited to the endplates? There's much more in play.bhall II wrote:Vortices shed from the front wing end plates don't "seal" anything. They spin the wrong way for that.
I just meant in some areas, not everything.Just_a_fan wrote:Not strictly true.djos wrote:So bhall but no one else agrees with your assertions.