Welcome, CMSMJ1! Good reasoning. You remind me (this is some kind of joke) of the 2005 Chemistry IG Nobel prize that settled "the longstanding scientific question: can people swim faster in syrup or in water?"CMSMJ1 wrote:hi all, 1st post, might as well get stuck in
they are both fluids for the purposes of physics and the movement of them. To take this to the extreme - if the cars drove through water would they generate more downforce? Of course they would.
It makes sense.
With regards to engines producing less power in the wet - I see no reson why this would be...
About the engine: does not the water change the fuel stoichiometry? Besides, if I remember well (help me here!) water has an enormous latent heat when compared with air.
I do decrease tyre pressure, thinking ahead: when rain starts to stop, the wet tyres heat really quickly if you don't.
You have to balance that carefully: if you are able to "drive around the dry spots in the track", you better change tyres quickly: a set of dry tyres on a humid track can outperform wet tyres by several seconds. Remember Schumacher in the 2003 US GP?
Besides, wet tyres are more porous (seriously, you can feel it by touching them), they are designed to work at lower temperatures (that's logical) and they degrade quickly on a drying track. You can scrub the tyres beforehand to reduce this effect.
When you drive in the rain you can also feel clearly how downforce increases by "itself". I'm totally sure about that: if you use a gurney flap on a stock car and do not change anything, you get understeer (the tail gets heavier). Rainy air is denser.
I think you can "feel" the mere presence of a cloud over the track when you drive an open wheeler (that makes the air over the track cooler and thus changes the front wing conditions) because my daughter, who has been tested on Pan Am formula told me so, and the girl knows her trade, so when water starts to evaporate F1 cars must know it's happening.
"Driving in the wet" has been compared to "going through the house blinded" and we may have experienced how much fear inspires following another car in heavy rain, but I think it is hard to understand how fast F1 cars travel. In 1976 Niki Lauda was beaten by James Hunt because he understood. I love to drive in the rain... when I'm alone in the track.