No. A paint lip 0.01mm thick is not going to have an appreciable affect on airflow. It is a purely aesthetic consideration.
No. A paint lip 0.01mm thick is not going to have an appreciable affect on airflow. It is a purely aesthetic consideration.
It is what I thought but because on the fin has a strange pattern split in 2 sections and also it is only on airflow areas I thought might had some effect. Thanks
Black/dark paint is heavier than white which is why airliners are all white. I assume gloss has to have some lacquer in it which would make it heavier than a matte finish? I can't imagine over the area of an F1 car the difference in weight is all that great otherwise they'd all be white.
Isn't black color better than white because of black carbon fibre? I'm not sure how relevant and reliable this article is today, but sounds logical (also floors and diffusers are black)jjn9128 wrote: ↑08 Feb 2020, 17:24Black/dark paint is heavier than white which is why airliners are all white. I assume gloss has to have some lacquer in it which would make it heavier than a matte finish? I can't imagine over the area of an F1 car the difference in weight is all that great otherwise they'd all be white.
from formula1-dictionary.netType of color is very important. Paints are specially developed for carbon fiber, and specially developed for Formula 1. Paint must be light and have good covering properties to save the weight. One of the advantages of having a black car for example is that you need less layers of paint to cover black carbon fiber than a white car, so you save weight, probably worth up to half a tenth of a second per lap. Painting an F1 car white, requires three or four layers and one top coat, and uses around 4 kilos of paint. A black car needs only one base layer and one top coat, so saves around 30% of paint.
Are you srue there was not more to the story? HaHolm86 wrote: ↑08 Feb 2020, 23:49I doubt planes will ever be mostly black, weight is a huge factor, but so is heat rejection.
Pepsi cola once made a marketing stunt, where they painted a Concorde in blue, and it wasn't able to fly at its cruise speed for more that 20 minutes, because the fuselage got too hot.
I know that modern airlines doesn't fly at supersonic speeds, but they spend s lot of time on the ground, with their engines turned off, and the engines drives the air-conditioning. So think of a black 787 sitting in the Dubai heat for a couple of hours, and then boarding it
https://simpleflying.com/air-france-pep ... -concorde/PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑09 Feb 2020, 01:16Are you srue there was not more to the story? HaHolm86 wrote: ↑08 Feb 2020, 23:49I doubt planes will ever be mostly black, weight is a huge factor, but so is heat rejection.
Pepsi cola once made a marketing stunt, where they painted a Concorde in blue, and it wasn't able to fly at its cruise speed for more that 20 minutes, because the fuselage got too hot.
I know that modern airlines doesn't fly at supersonic speeds, but they spend s lot of time on the ground, with their engines turned off, and the engines drives the air-conditioning. So think of a black 787 sitting in the Dubai heat for a couple of hours, and then boarding it
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... 37-7H4.jpg
The concorde goes supersonic... But i dont see any increase in radiation from the sun there...
Possibly the blue paint was not a high performing paint?