#aerogollumturbof1 wrote: YOU SHALL NOT......STALLLLL!!!
To summarizef1316 wrote: ↑30 Mar 2017, 15:32
Surely it's about the design lineage of the SF70H - and a specific design feature that's *on the car*?
At this rate, we will eventually get to the point that anything we want to discuss about the car at any length is moved to its own discussion and the car thread itself is completely barren...
Vanja #66 wrote: ↑02 Mar 2017, 14:36With this concept Ferrari could have provided quite a larger amount of air to the back of the car coming from under the sidepod opening. Also, top sidepod opening is in a position where the flow starts bending downwards on the sidepod top surface so the lower pressure that is created there has a smaller effect (in contact with a smaller surface). So Ferrari could have made two big steps in this area - maximizing the amount of air going to the top of the diffuser and minimizing the lift created on top of the sidepods.
Tons of ellipses =D>ringo wrote: ↑26 Mar 2017, 21:57Its obvious a lot of man hours went into this car...more than they normally do. The team just seems more efficient and smart.
The sidepod solution is really out of the box, someone was smoking some really strong weed working on this "cut and flip" philosophy. The philosophy behind it was to have the same sidepod inlet area, but flip half of it into another plane; copy and paste a body width rear wing in the middle of the car. Cheap drag reduction from flipping the inlet area out of the front plane, and cheap downforce for putting a goddamn rear wing in the middle of the car.
When i say cheap, i mean the solution avoids refining existing parts for small gains, since it is additional bodywork that generates its own downforce. Similar to a monkey seat. Less time and money to have more surface area than refining an existing area such as a floor or side pod for a smaller gain.
The mid body wing is ferrari's advantage, and also the sidepod inlet and radiator treatment.
Not to mention easily shorter WB
Now ask yourself: does air flow really need to be attached to the top of the monocoque? And, if so, since when does air flow need help staying attached to a surface that presents a relatively favorable pressure gradient like the one below?Willem Toet, June 14, 2016 wrote:Amateurs think they can explain technical things like diffusers and front wings, but clearly have no idea what is behind the engineering side. Their well-meaning and often seemingly plausible offerings proliferate and become folklore. Professional journalists are not often engineers, are not told the truth by the teams. Race engineers rarely know about aerodynamics in detail anyway and they’d rather invent a plausible story than convey the truth because the teams don’t want the truth to be told in case it gives away an advantage. Eventually, long-standing journalists may have earned enough respect to be told the truth, but then they are told that they cannot publish that juicy fact.... I’ve read every piece I can find on double diffusers and haven’t yet found one that I think covers the technical side of the subject really well. In part that’s because most articles are short but in part because that combination of willingness to expose and availability of technical facts is missing. The fault really lies with the teams who are so obsessed with secrecy they don’t allow information to flow into the public domain.
It does not, but when it stays attached it helps with managing said air flow to the rest of the car because it's flow is more predictable
To further your thoughts, if the airflow does stay attached as it goes over the angle change to the flat top of the monocoque then it will accelerate, the pressure will drop and lift will be created.bhall II wrote: ↑03 Apr 2017, 19:20Just some food for thought...
Now ask yourself: does air flow really need to be attached to the top of the monocoque? And, if so, since when does air flow need help staying attached to a surface that presents a relatively favorable pressure gradient like the one below?Willem Toet, June 14, 2016 wrote:Amateurs think they can explain technical things like diffusers and front wings, but clearly have no idea what is behind the engineering side. Their well-meaning and often seemingly plausible offerings proliferate and become folklore. Professional journalists are not often engineers, are not told the truth by the teams. Race engineers rarely know about aerodynamics in detail anyway and they’d rather invent a plausible story than convey the truth because the teams don’t want the truth to be told in case it gives away an advantage. Eventually, long-standing journalists may have earned enough respect to be told the truth, but then they are told that they cannot publish that juicy fact.... I’ve read every piece I can find on double diffusers and haven’t yet found one that I think covers the technical side of the subject really well. In part that’s because most articles are short but in part because that combination of willingness to expose and availability of technical facts is missing. The fault really lies with the teams who are so obsessed with secrecy they don’t allow information to flow into the public domain.
http://i.imgur.com/ImWclHz.jpg
Incidentally, it's generally accepted that F2008's duct was about limiting the downstream obstruction to the front wing's spoon section caused by the nose...
http://i.imgur.com/qbvleSf.jpg
That was my understanding as well. I never thought it was meant to anything special to the airflow above the nose. Downstream around the cockpit area that will be totally messed up anyway. Also I would assume that adding the medium/lowish energy air flow over the nose will rather increase/thicken the boundary layer over the nose while reducing it underneath the nose. Looking at the aerodramatic mess that is the open cockpit a thicker boundary layer in that area might not even be such a bad thing.