Greg Locock wrote:cite please, in my experience the first few degrees make little difference.
Only my experience in my every day workload, Yaw is significant. What sort of cars were you testing on?
Pierce89 wrote:gixxer_drew wrote:Consider that a modern car, say an LMP1 goes from having downforce measured in tonnes to lift sufficient to pull it off the ground in ~90 degrees of yaw with an array of anti blow-over devices... yes a few degrees change everything.
I've also seen wind tunnel studies of modern lmp cars in RCE that show little loss or even DF gains at small yaw angles
Be careful with RCE stuff, isnt that done in a non moving belt scenario with relatively low downforce cars? I am talking about more than a "few" degrees of yaw, but not a lot more either.
Lets say you get a change of 3-5% front downforce, thats a very significant change for something at high level professional motorsports. Someone who worked to get those losses back will be significantly faster than someone who didn't.
Also how they are simulating yaw, I look at it with the car in attitude in every way, rotating and steered tires, roll + yaw, tire distortion. Just steering the tires has a pretty large effect so I would check first they are doing all that and not just having the car on a rotating table top. Thats pretty commonly used for low end wind tunnels and meant for crosswind NVH prod car stuff. Anyone saying the effect is small catches my suspension right away that they dont have a correct perspective on what is "small" or they arent testing properly. I can tell you right now in pro level, anyone not developing in yaw will not be competitive.