Not in my experience, like I was saying above, they dont put the aerodynamic design in a position where it can be dominant in the decisions of the final shape. Most of what you up doing is little bag of tricks, not designing a highly streamlined vehicle. I know whats possible, I've done it for competition stuff and I have friends who were involved in those sort of competitions like the X-prize. It's funny though.... I was having a chat just last night with a designer at Honda about this. They make some of the most efficient vehicles on the market.... Still designed by artists and marketeers with a little input from the technical group up until the later phases of the design (too late, I say)Tommy Cookers wrote:@drew
isn't the industry policy consistent with my view ?
you may be sure that their policy is wrong, but they don't think it's wrong ?
Even the most streamlined cars out there today, the most efficient shapes on the market, they still were quite limited in the scope of what they could do. Car still had to be "conventional" in so many ways. Not that I fault the industry for not pursuing ultimate efficiency, they are a business, they have to make what people will buy.
Take a peak at those X-prize cars and how "conventional" they still needed to be. How they defined their efficiency. Then consider the cost difference in the development of that shape to a modern production car. I think the stuff that can be done would make the fuel efficiency of modern cars look like a joke, frankly. I dont really want to beat the horse to death, thats just what I've seen and done in my experience and I'm stick with it.