New engine cover with additional roll hoop air intake.
Is this engine cover slimmer or is it just my eyes playing tricks on me? That shark fin looks amazing
Why wouldn't it?McMrocks wrote:How is the air going to stay attached where the engine cover and the shark fin meet? Or doesn't it?
The airflow would have to move almost 90° to the direction the car is traveling. Especially where the engine cover drops almost vertically in side view. Imagine the flow in top viewwesley123 wrote:Why wouldn't it?McMrocks wrote:How is the air going to stay attached where the engine cover and the shark fin meet? Or doesn't it?
I really don't get why teams make engine covers in that rounded shape before the fin instead of tapering down smoothly towards the edge like they did until the early 2000's.McMrocks wrote:The airflow would have to move almost 90° to the direction the car is traveling. Especially where the engine cover drops almost vertically in side view. Imagine the flow in top viewwesley123 wrote:Why wouldn't it?McMrocks wrote:How is the air going to stay attached where the engine cover and the shark fin meet? Or doesn't it?
You are forgetting to consider that the flow is 3 dimensional and there is air flow moving laterally as well; not just along the surface.McMrocks wrote:The airflow would have to move almost 90° to the direction the car is traveling. Especially where the engine cover drops almost vertically in side view. Imagine the flow in top viewwesley123 wrote:Why wouldn't it?McMrocks wrote:How is the air going to stay attached where the engine cover and the shark fin meet? Or doesn't it?
If I understand what you mean, the answer is cooling. Current engine covers (and they have been like this since 2009 or 2010 with the Red Bull's I believe.) feature cooling ducts for the ERS and or gearbox, which wasn't the case in the early to mid 2000's.DiogoBrand wrote:I really don't get why teams make engine covers in that rounded shape before the fin instead of tapering down smoothly towards the edge like they did until the early 2000's.McMrocks wrote:The airflow would have to move almost 90° to the direction the car is traveling. Especially where the engine cover drops almost vertically in side view. Imagine the flow in top viewwesley123 wrote: Why wouldn't it?
http://www.ultimatecarpage.com/images/c ... -13633.jpg
This shape looks more aerodynamic than the ones they currently use. Perhaps someone with aerodynamic knowledge could explain.
I know the reason they're bigger, but since they have a mandated area, some teams (including Toro Rosso) put a 'shark fin' behind the cooling ducts to meet the requirements.Blaze1 wrote:If I understand what you mean, the answer is cooling. Current engine covers (and they have been like this since 2009 or 2010 with the Red Bull's I believe.) feature cooling ducts for the ERS and or gearbox, which wasn't the case in the early to mid 2000's.DiogoBrand wrote:I really don't get why teams make engine covers in that rounded shape before the fin instead of tapering down smoothly towards the edge like they did until the early 2000's.McMrocks wrote: The airflow would have to move almost 90° to the direction the car is traveling. Especially where the engine cover drops almost vertically in side view. Imagine the flow in top view
http://www.ultimatecarpage.com/images/c ... -13633.jpg
This shape looks more aerodynamic than the ones they currently use. Perhaps someone with aerodynamic knowledge could explain.