Greg Locock wrote: ↑22 Dec 2020, 11:47
But the results from different wind tunnels will give you different estimates , as will results from the road.
Yes, that's why you try to stick with one windtunnel you know. Many F1 teams have their own Windtunnel or rent always the same so they get reliable and more importently repeatable results.
Btw. Doesn't matter what you use, a laser or a strain gauge, you have to declutter the signal anyway to get any useful information out of it. If you drive over a bumb, a strain gauge will also show a deflection. If the recording resolution is high enough, you might see the vibration the moving parts of the car cause.
The strain gauge has the advantage to be easy to zero in. Under the premise that the stretch of the part you install the gauge behaves linear to the force applied (which in most cases it will) you only need 2 refrencepoints to define the whole system. With a laser measuring basically the ground clearance, it won't be that simple because the relative geometry change of the moving suspension can cause a slithly none linear behaviour when it comes to ground clearance relative to applied downforce.