Vanja #66 wrote: ↑11 Feb 2018, 12:10
Let's break that down a bit
mmred wrote: ↑11 Feb 2018, 00:28
moving the aero as close as possible to the rear diffuser is common standard
Not really, explained bellow.
mmred wrote: ↑11 Feb 2018, 00:28
it is about impressing the highest possible upward deflection there without separation to allow the diffuser to not stall as well in the sudden expansion after the edge is reached
Not really, but what you mention here is a solution to creating a low pressure zone above diffuser exit, to pump out the air underneath it. As rules don't allow teams to have another wing right above diffuser exit, they put them where they can - in front of it and in very aggressive positions.
mmred wrote: ↑11 Feb 2018, 00:28
it s practically the whole purpouse of the monkeyseat combined with the exhaust
and the whole purpouse of the flaps at the diffuser edge as well
Monkey seat is for the rear wing mainly, when you have extreme angles of attack of both wings on slower circuits, you don't want the flow to separate from the rear wing flap. Flaps around the diffuser edge are mentioned above.
On the contrary, arms that roon draw are moved forward and are (possibly) perpendicular to the airflow. This creates less disruption, as it allows for cleaner airflow above the diffuser. You want as clean as possible airflow above the diffuser, to have as much energy as possible to pump out the air under the floor. So it's a good thing in fact.
What McLaren tried a few years ago was (and still is) a mystery to me. Looking at it now (if it's an aero thing in the first place), I'm thinking they wanted to force a high pressure zone above the diffuser and at the same time leave those slots between them and between lower arms and diffuser. Trough those slots you'd have a high speed airflow with a nice amount of energy (much like slots between flaps and wings) to help pump out the air under the floor. The only problem is that those arms are moving in respect to diffuser and so you'd never have a constant height slot - you don't want that.
the discussion is quite long
1) monkey seats interacts with the diffuser as well, it s litterary in the middle between diffuser and rear wing, while its upper flux creates high pressure that compensate for the bottom part of the wing low pressure thus allowing an higher ange of attack without stall, its bottom flux is low pressure and alleviates the high pressure over the diffuser ( top side ) thus reducing the disparity with the lower diffuser low pressure and high velocity and reducing the detachment and turbulent wake that comes from the sudden mix of two two much different fluxes, reducing stall ( that advances backwards into the diffuser ) and drag
i mean this is basic aerodinamic of profiles ( cfd eng here )
probably the interaction with the rear wing is more important, but i dont underestimate the interaction with the diffuser cause well the gearbox pilon there practically creates also an imminent separation there ( with its sudden end ) and lowering the pressure is a way to manage that separation over the diffuser too
2)but i agree that the flaps are the main example of air jets with low pressure pushed over the diffuser to raise the flux profile by profile without stall or detachment
of course the same works also for PUMPIN air out of the diffuser, but it s laminar air you want so you have to reduce the disparity in pressure between the two sides and lift up the flux, if you get separation you dont achieve the same deviation and drug increases and basically the diffuser is choked
pumpin and raisin up the flux is the same, i reason in terms of flow lines you reason in terms of pressure field ( it s a choice, i guess i am the weird one in this kind of reasoning but it s my habit to think about flow lines before pressure )
so i disagree with your "not really" : detachment is Exactly what you want to avoid
3)as u said too they cant put close profiles that s why mclaren did put its suspensions so backwards and that s the aero adv of suspensions, if done right ( the shape of the mclaren wasnt so intuitive tough, i guess they merely put a nolder shaped suspension that tried to detach the flow at the top side to reduce the pressure and improve the rear wing, and they had a more shape at the bottom side that interacted with the diffuser , they didnt use a conventional profile so the logic was different for the top )
so i disagree with the suspension seen just as detrimental aero interface
it s 10 years that suspensions are profiled. they are used exactly for that as an aero interface capable ( theoretically becuase with a neutral profile it s harder ) of lifting the flux
4) but also mclaren choice didnt prove effective that s why suspensions are mostly used as neutral surfaces that just prevent turbulence formation
so if puttin them closer to the front doesnt make no good, in my opinion, and in the general opinion of the teams till now, also putting it behind would require to use better profiles, but rules dont allow any profile to be used so the results are ineffective
4)the movement can either be a problem or an advantage, generally suspensions raise on turns where you need more load and the opening of the slot does have a positive effect, while you dont need too much load on the straight when they do lower down and the slot chokes, and the choking slot can make the diffuser under it stall or at least diverts the flux lines downwards reducing the effective aoa and so the overall diffuser load and drag
it could be good
i think mc failure was really more in the profile they could choose due to regulations, cause if you want something to act as a good aero device despite its pegiorative weight you want it more efficient and with a better profile
so far if there s no advantage in the backward suspensions position ( compared to weight increase ) my opinion is that the forward positioning ( with same weight increase and even less aero opportunity, cause a neutral suspension doesnt give the same advantage as one that trie to have an "active" aero ) is really useless, well detrimental to be honest