henry wrote:The flow vis looks to me as though it shows a vortex along the front of the sidepod which as it leaves is aligned with the notch in the floor. Is it possible it migrates under the floor?
I'm not looking at what seems to be a vortex now (too much for this moment, there are other thing that need to be cleared before that
but Scarbs seems to think so in the
ESPN article I forwarded the photo from), I'm just looking at the wishbone pick-up and huge difference compared to last year. Again:
RB12
RB13
RB13+flow viz
Compare RB12 and SF16:
People noticed last year that Ferrari wishbones are thicker and of this there is no doubt. Thicker wishbones allow for longer cord of that airfoil as far as I know, so it would make sense if Ferrari was using them for aero like Mercedes did to point the air downwards. They still do it:
And now Red Bull as well. Or maybe this is too much armchair CFD...
f1316 wrote:Seems to fulfill the same function as the small winglets on the Ferrari then (albeit, much lower on the chassis)? Presumably Red Bull think it's more efficient to use the suspension to use the wishbone as a wing to avoid additional drag?
SF70H looks to be using higher layers, above the suspension, and guiding them down. These aren't disturbed by front wing and should have more energy. I'll post a bit more on SF70 in its thread...
Just_a_fan wrote:Very good view of the extensive series of fences below the tub. I think RedBull is using this area as a tunnel to set up and guide air on to the t-tray and then down under the floor's leading edge. This seems to be a big difference between the RedBull and other cars from what I've seen so far. I think it's done to maximise the airflow in to the very large expansion diffuser that the floor is these days with the rake they run. Mercedes don't do this and they don't run the same rake. Another clue to the different philosophies, I think.
Yes, those turning vanes have grown into outright fences. By the looks of them, perhaps multiple elements and slots are used in three ways:
-sucking out the boundary layer from the outside to keep that outer flow nice and clean
-energizing the inner flow for more "oomph" before it gets to the sidepods and wherever afterwards
-keeping these two zones separated as much as possible...
Just a thought...