When calculating the frontal area of a open wheel car... do you include the frontal area of the rear wheels whether or not they are in inline with the front wheels? Is there some kind of convention or standard related to this issue?
Brian
Only the part you see from the front. Basically you want the area of the shadow cast by a light behind the car to a wall in front of the car.hardingfv32 wrote:When calculating the frontal area of a open wheel car... do you include the frontal area of the rear wheels whether or not they are in inline with the front wheels? Is there some kind of convention or standard related to this issue?
Brian
You will find that the way in which most CFD software packages calculate the downforce is by summing up all of the vertical components of the force that each of the relevant (not all...) mesh cells converge to. From this, you get your downforce as a "force" in Newtons. The force is obtained first through means independent of the coefficient.DiogoBrand wrote:Possibly dumb question here: Does the frontal area matter that much? From my little aerodynamic knowledge I believe you can have two completely different drag and downforce values with the same frontal area. All would depend on how tapered is the shape, how the airflow is managed, etc.
The frontal area is used to normalise the Cl/Cd values for the the physical size of the object.DiogoBrand wrote:Possibly dumb question here: Does the frontal area matter that much? From my little aerodynamic knowledge I believe you can have two completely different drag and downforce values with the same frontal area. All would depend on how tapered is the shape, how the airflow is managed, etc.