godlameroso wrote: ↑26 Mar 2018, 22:16
they will never have the same intimate understanding of airflow as a bird.
You see, it's this sort of thing that I find annoying. BIrds, almost certainly, don't understand airflow in any meaningful way. They are intuitive fliers and don't need to understand about pressure and vortices, lift and drag. They just fly. They feel the air moving and adjust their wings and tail to get to where they want to go accordingly. No conscious thought required.
Birds haven't been designed except by evolution - which is why there are so many different types of bird with different flight characteristics. Birds don't sit there and think "I know, I'll grow a vortex generator here because that will give me a 2% improvement in L/D". A Peregrine would be rubbish flying thousands of miles over open ocean and an Albatross can't stoop at 125mph, a hummingbird can hover but can't lift a rabbit, an eagle can lift a rabbit but can't hover.
If teams should be looking at nature, for clues, perhaps F1 teams that struggle with overheating should look at humans for clues. Why? We're really effective at temperature control. Indeed, we're some of the most effective hot weather mammals there are. Humans can run - that's run - for hours at a time in 40deg C. Sure, we need to take on water to do it, but there's nothing else out there that is as effective. No horse or dog could do it, for example, and neither can just about anything that is born and lives in such temperatures. We evolved to do this because we're basically slow and weak with small teeth and no claws. But we can run in high heat. So we can run a prey animal until it literally collapses with heat exhaustion - antelope are still hunted this way by traditional tribes in Africa. (I say "we" in the species-sense. Not me - I'd have a heart attack before the antelope had even broken out of a trot!
)
Wow, F1 teams are so sweat-brained that they haven't looked at human persperation for inspiration!
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.