Tim.Wright wrote:Interesting... I assume that these numbers are from a CFD study? Otherwise I'm extremely dubious about how you calculate the drag force of the floor on a running car.
If these figures are accurate they go against the popular theory that ground effects are less susceptible to turbulence than wings.
Yes, Tim, these numbers are from a CFD study and these numbers do correlate well with tunnel and track data.
As far as ground effects is concerned, the general consensus that you mentioned in your post above is really simplistic and the truth is far from it. Ground effects, if done right, can help with the balance shift issue that F1 faces these days. The loss of down-force experienced by a ground effect floor is even when we look at the pressure distribution, which in return maintains the balance. It is definitively a good tool for helping the balance problem and if combined with the right wing package and bodywork design can result in a really useful Formula which would be miles better in promoting close racing.
horse wrote:miqi23 wrote: it is at the floor inlet which is driven by the barge-boards vortices and other interacting flow structures which has lost most of its energy by being in a wake of another car.
Just_a_fan wrote:The front wing and associated under-nose devices affect the flow under the leading edge of the floor hence the bargeboards etc.
Are the bargeboards really affected by turbulent air that much? They are not really aerodynamic, hence their name. I would have thought they would help tidy up the airflow to the floor leading edge in this situation.
Yes, they are affected by turbulent air and depending on the turbulence levels their performance can reduce radically even if you have high energy flow around the barge board. The increase in turbulence affects the boundary layer and cause early separation if your geometry is too aggressive (which barge boards are) and you would want an attached flow in regions of interest (which are detailed small shapes with specific features) to aid the formation of high strength vortices - a separated flow in regions of such geometry does not give you the required vortices.
Front wings are similar, too complex and you are risking losing performance - this is why simplified front wings perform better in higher turbulence environments.