CBeck113 wrote:DiogoBrand wrote:bhall II wrote:I'm pretty sure tire pressure doesn't change when it's "squeezed." In a closed system, pressure is the result of temperature and volume.
It's simple: Pressure is the result of
weight, temperature and volume. When the tyres are "squeezed" because of mechanical or aerodynamical load, rolling, pitch, or whatever, the volume decreases while weight and temperature stay the same and therefore, although not very much, pressure rises.
What you're saying is that the form of the tire is rigid everywhere on the tire except on the contact patch, which is not true - the question is how much of a pressure change is necessaary to change the form (i.e. increase the volume) of the tire in regards to the fact that it is a flexible material.
Owen.C93 explained it very well just before your post. It's a lot easier to compress a tyre than to expand it. So when you compress the contact patch there probaly is some expansion everywhere else, but the expansion goes to a smaller volume than the compression, therefore there is pressure build up.
I was gonna ask about this one:
What's the difference between this one to Merc's inverted concave wing? Is one better than the other?
I'd say the advantage of the Williams one is that the air on the higher AoA sections is cleaner, due to not having so much interference of bodywork. Which is the reason they also use this kind of wing on GT cars.
While on Mercedes they reduce the vortices on the wingtips, therefore reducing drag, but I'd like someone with more knowledge on the subject to talk about this.