Red Bull Racing has become the fourth F1 team to present its 2021 F1 challenger, the new RB16B car, which is set to be piloted by Verstappen and Perez in 2021.
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Making parts doesn’t really cost budget. You pay for your staff, materials, facility and overhead. All are more or less already paid for. So just make use of the capacity as much as you can.
Every part you make requires materials both for the part itself and for molds required. And there is wastage of materials e.g. off cuts that can't be used elsewhere. If those parts are additional to the ones you budgeted for then the material has to be bought. Any time spent making those parts can't be used to make other parts - a technician can only do one thing at a time. So there is materials budget and manpower budget. To say that making parts doesn't cost budget is strange, I must say.
You are just disagreeing for the sake of it now. I am just saying that if you wouldn’t make any part at all most of the costs would be incurred anyway. Salary, overhead, equipment, building etc. The only real difference between making use of your capacity or not is the actual material. That isn’t the main part, it is a fraction. The real limitation is how much capacity you do have, on all the mentioned aspects.
Nicolas Carpentiers wrote:On the RB16B, Red Bull has now extended the serrated trailing edge to the full lenght of the diffuser flap (not only in the corners). It seems to be made of carbon.
Scarbs wrote:Developments on Red Bull diffuser. The metal steak knife sections are now much wider, with a third serrated trailing edge added in the middle.
Nicolas Carpentiers wrote:On the RB16B, Red Bull has now extended the serrated trailing edge to the full lenght of the diffuser flap (not only in the corners). It seems to be made of carbon.
Scarbs wrote:Developments on Red Bull diffuser. The metal steak knife sections are now much wider, with a third serrated trailing edge added in the middle.
Can someone explain the aerodynamic reason for the serrated edges, please?
Thank you.
I am no aerodynamist but know from windturbine blade design that a serrated edge influences the trailing edge turbulence (which lowers turbulence intensity and thereby lowerering noise emission). I suspect that by lowering the trailing edge turbulence you can reduce drag, or may be even increase the low pressure region, which benefits the diffusor.
Last edited by TNTHead on 12 Jul 2021, 13:29, edited 1 time in total.
Can someone explain the aerodynamic reason for the serrated edges, please?
Thank you.
I am no aerodynamist but know from windturbine blade design that a serrated edge influences the trailing edge turbulence (which lowers turbulence intensity and thereby lowerering noise emission). I suspect that by lowering the teailing edge turbulence you can reduce drag, or may be even increase the low pressure region, which benefits the diffusor.
How does the air just ahead of the diffuser interact with the upwash caused by the part with the serrated flap?
Can someone explain the aerodynamic reason for the serrated edges, please?
Thank you.
I am no aerodynamist but know from windturbine blade design that a serrated edge influences the trailing edge turbulence (which lowers turbulence intensity and thereby lowerering noise emission). I suspect that by lowering the teailing edge turbulence you can reduce drag, or may be even increase the low pressure region, which benefits the diffusor.
How does the air just ahead of the diffuser interact with the upwash caused by the part with the serrated flap?
In this area, you should focus on the flow expansion and acceleration rather than upwash, outwash, etc. They don't care where it's going as long as it's expanding. The expansion causes the flow in the diffuser to accelerate. The knock on effect is an acceleration of the the flow just ahead of the diffuser. The diffuser's job is simply to accelerate the airflow under the flat floor which generates the bulk of the floor downforce.
Last edited by AR3-GP on 12 Jul 2021, 05:21, edited 1 time in total.
In layman’s term, there is more carbon to interact with the airflow.
I think it's to create vertices to reduce drag.
Do they cause more air disruption for a car that’s following? It would seem a host of vortices pouring off the back of the car would wreak havoc for the following car. Is this an “defensive” type of aero in addition to drag reduction?
In layman’s term, there is more carbon to interact with the airflow.
No, because it energises the airstream and stops it detaching as harshly. It's a trade off of local efficiency/drag for total, and keeping things more predicable with airflow/rideheight changes
In layman’s term, there is more carbon to interact with the airflow.
I think it's to create vertices to reduce drag.
Do they cause more air disruption for a car that’s following? It would seem a host of vortices pouring off the back of the car would wreak havoc for the following car. Is this an “defensive” type of aero in addition to drag reduction?
They just spin like mini tornadoes. Like the little flip up on plane wings. They also reduce drag.