slimjim8201 wrote:It has less to do with moments and more to do with overall lift. Most cars produce a small amount of lift at speed. Certain cars like the VW New Beetle and the Audi TT have a rather airfoil like side profile. They produce measureable amounts of lift at speed and cornering capabilities suffer as velocity increases. The purpose of the spoiler is to disrupt the flow so that the car isn't an efficient "wing" anymore. I'm not sure pitch and dive have much to do with it.NDR008 wrote:Oh, and one final note - on most road cars, spoilers and 'aero' devices are stuck on for the wrong reasons.
Also some cars like the Audi TT have a stock spoiler at the back for different reasons. Besides drag and downforce you have pitching moments. The Audi TT is by nature unstable, when you go over a bump the car prefers lifting its nose up, and this in turn further increases the pitching up effect. The spoiler at the back is to bring back the stability by causing a restoring moment in such a scenario.
These devices do not produce downforce, they merely decrease lift.
I am actually sure because my aero lecturer was part of the aero-test team of that car