Seems like lions may well have aero, downforce, steering, & suspension - performance insights to offer..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcEFTGb_ZR0
I mean, the male lions have built in flow visualization too!!J.A.W. wrote: ↑23 Mar 2018, 07:15Seems like lions may well have aero, downforce, steering, & suspension - performance insights to offer..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcEFTGb_ZR0
You're completely ignoring the fact that the inside of the front wing and the edge of the toucan wing are built for almost the exactly opposite characteristics. The toucan wing is designed to reduce the vortex as much as possible and therefore reduce drag. The inside of the front wing is designed to create a vortex to do a very specific job.godlameroso wrote: ↑22 Mar 2018, 13:51Good question, are your fingers airfoil shaped? If not I'd say you're at a slight disadvantage.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑22 Mar 2018, 13:34The Y250 flaps are trying to make a really strong single vortex. The bird's wing isn't.godlameroso wrote: ↑22 Mar 2018, 06:55
Look at the front wings of most cars, the flaps responsible for the y250 look an awful lot like bird wing tips, just inverted.
I can position the fingers of my hand to mimic the wing tip primaries of a bird. Will my hand do the same as the wing and let me flyyyyyyy? Er, nope.
Oh lordy. In the hopes of not beating a dead horse I already understand and have stated numerous times that a birds create lift(+), F1 cars create lift(-). I'm not new here, I would hope you know I understand the difference. I've stated many times that the concepts have to be INVERTED for them to work with an F1 car. But that doesn't mean that the concepts don't work, clearly they do, or the creatures that exploit these concepts wouldn't have them(nature is much more efficient at design that we are). Vortecies form in drain tubs and tornadoes, meaning that aerodynamic phenomena works for everyone equally, it's completely progressive.trinidefender wrote: ↑23 Mar 2018, 20:33You're completely ignoring the fact that the inside of the front wing and the edge of the toucan wing are built for almost the exactly opposite characteristics. The toucan wing is designed to reduce the vortex as much as possible and therefore reduce drag. The inside of the front wing is designed to create a vortex to do a very specific job.godlameroso wrote: ↑22 Mar 2018, 13:51Good question, are your fingers airfoil shaped? If not I'd say you're at a slight disadvantage.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑22 Mar 2018, 13:34
The Y250 flaps are trying to make a really strong single vortex. The bird's wing isn't.
I can position the fingers of my hand to mimic the wing tip primaries of a bird. Will my hand do the same as the wing and let me flyyyyyyy? Er, nope.
I'm fairly certain you are just seeing random similarities between them and think that that is the answer.
On another note, if you see 5 buildings that create a start when lines are drawn between them does this mean that they are illuminati controlled buildings?
What on a bird is copied on F1 cars for the same exact purpose? The wing flaps you pointed to on the car are not doing the same job as the wing end feathers on the bird. The VGs on top of the McLaren side pods have no corresponding structure on a bird. The rear diffuser has no corresponding structure on a bird.I guess I'm just seeing things when structures on birds that are designed to control airflow end up on F1 cars for the same exact purpose, yep, I'm just seeing things.
Bird tail shape/function - a "rear diffuser"?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑23 Mar 2018, 22:12What on a bird is copied on F1 cars...The rear diffuser has no corresponding structure on a bird.
Neither are flying bricksJust_a_fan wrote: ↑23 Mar 2018, 22:12What on a bird is copied on F1 cars for the same exact purpose? The wing flaps you pointed to on the car are not doing the same job as the wing end feathers on the bird. The VGs on top of the McLaren side pods have no corresponding structure on a bird. The rear diffuser has no corresponding structure on a bird.I guess I'm just seeing things when structures on birds that are designed to control airflow end up on F1 cars for the same exact purpose, yep, I'm just seeing things.
Indeed J-a-f, let alone a 350lb human female, so for sure, those cats are far more athletically capable than us for such activities, as research into their musculo-skeletal systems shows, inc' individual muscle-fibre power 3 times that of even trained human athletes.. see: http://jeb.biologists.org/content/216/6/960.fullJust_a_fan wrote: ↑23 Mar 2018, 11:18Half expected the lioness to break a hind leg in that jump/fall. The way her back end crumples down on to the ground as she lands. You or I would be hospital...
No. A bird's tail is an active control surface that is used to impart roll and pitch moments to the bird's body. A car's diffuser is a passive device intended solely to reduce the air speed, and hence increase the pressure, of the air flow below the car before the flow joins the freestream flow. It reduces drag and lift that way.J.A.W. wrote: ↑23 Mar 2018, 23:40
Bird tail shape/function - a "rear diffuser"?
http://i.stack.imgur.com/Ki6tv.png
The drivers are catty enough now, imagine some big cat genes in them - they'd be unmanageable!
Could it be, part of the active function set of the bird's tail - is to do just that - such as in ground effects situations?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑24 Mar 2018, 02:17No. A bird's tail is an active control surface that is used to impart roll and pitch moments to the bird's body. A car's diffuser is a passive device intended solely to reduce the air speed, and hence increase the pressure, of the air flow below the car before the flow joins the freestream flow. It reduces drag and lift that way.J.A.W. wrote: ↑23 Mar 2018, 23:40
Bird tail shape/function - a "rear diffuser"?
http://i.stack.imgur.com/Ki6tv.png
The odd thing is by your response you clearly didn't read my post carefully. It is not about which force vector the lift is in. In fact the force vector can be sideways for all I care.godlameroso wrote: ↑23 Mar 2018, 21:25Oh lordy. In the hopes of not beating a dead horse I already understand and have stated numerous times that a birds create lift(+), F1 cars create lift(-). I'm not new here, I would hope you know I understand the difference. I've stated many times that the concepts have to be INVERTED for them to work with an F1 car. But that doesn't mean that the concepts don't work, clearly they do, or the creatures that exploit these concepts wouldn't have them(nature is much more efficient at design that we are). Vortecies form in drain tubs and tornadoes, meaning that aerodynamic phenomena works for everyone equally, it's completely progressive.trinidefender wrote: ↑23 Mar 2018, 20:33You're completely ignoring the fact that the inside of the front wing and the edge of the toucan wing are built for almost the exactly opposite characteristics. The toucan wing is designed to reduce the vortex as much as possible and therefore reduce drag. The inside of the front wing is designed to create a vortex to do a very specific job.godlameroso wrote: ↑22 Mar 2018, 13:51
Good question, are your fingers airfoil shaped? If not I'd say you're at a slight disadvantage.
I'm fairly certain you are just seeing random similarities between them and think that that is the answer.
On another note, if you see 5 buildings that create a start when lines are drawn between them does this mean that they are illuminati controlled buildings?
Apparently it's too much of a stretch to think some bird brain aerodynamicist is having separation problems in a certain area, and then looks to see how nature has dealt with the problem. Apparently it's too much of a stretch to think nature after millions of years of evolution would have come up with a better solution than some bird brain in a wind tunnel after a few years.
I guess I'm just seeing things when structures on birds that are designed to control airflow end up on F1 cars for the same exact purpose, yep, I'm just seeing things.