That doesn't really show the airflow though. What it shows is the paths taken by air passing over the tip of the nose and the tip of the wing. What is the rest of the air doing?tomislavp4 wrote:shawness, take a look at this http://i131.photobucket.com/albums/p314 ... 8/Nose.jpg (it was posted on the 2nd page on the forum) it clearly shows the airflow
My first post about this was actually relating what I'd been told when I asked an F1 designer about the concept - he did mention that it might be workable if you carried the rear of the upper wing element to the bottom of the tunnel - as depicted I think you'd leak air through the slot into the low pressure area behind the wing.manchild wrote:Once again I say, don't take the shapes and their positions/sizes as defined, if I had the way to experiment I'd sketch shape that shows best results.
Another question: What do you think about "overlapping" of those two elements? Could there be some benefit in it since they'd form a Venturi tube? If so, wouldn't the hole than speed up the air even more and naturally decrease pressure below front element?
Well, I thought about naca ducts positioned as usual when they are used for intake but instead of being opened at rear to be fully opened at front.PNSD wrote:Looks cool, but how would the naca ducts work because they're usually for intake arnt they...
dont they take air of the boundry layer?
Because the topic was revived by several posts that mentioned gossips about Ferrari testing it on F2008.Belatti wrote:why did MC used a Ferrari photo to illustrate his idea?
I remember talks about tesing it within a few days or sumfin... any news on this?manchild wrote:Because the topic was revived by several posts that mentioned gossips about Ferrari testing it on F2008.
Well, I thought that adding side vents would completely prevent possible problems shoen under 2 and 3modbaraban wrote:I don't quite understad the benefits of cuts in the sides:
Any comments?