modbaraban wrote:Wouldn't that odd F1 shape make the car flip like that CLK GTR in normal conditions (going forwards)???
I think the real problem is the curbs and walls and how they are placed along each other.
Unlike all these examples F1 cars don't generate lift with yaw (correct me if I'm wrong).
Also wider and slick tyres would improve safety too, when the car goes spinning.
Yes, I think I'm bad at drawing, but you get the idea. I don't know if it's possible (or desirable or even legal) to give the car the appropriate longitudinal shape (not like my failed effort, but like a
real wing).
I mean, perhaps there is a way to make the whole car behave like a wing, not just the diffuser. Again, I really don't think it's workable, it's just a YACI.
Actually, Zac's link shows more than that, I think.
I think it means that the shape of car has to be
stable when it turns (even spinning) or it raises its nose (even bumping into something) or it loses an aerodynamic element (was that what happened to Kubica?
I think what the lessons at NASCAR and Le Mans teach is that the car has to be kept against the ground as much as possible, not "thrown into the blue sky" by "angles of attack" not taken in account in design.
I think you're right, it
seems F1 cars generate lift with pitch changes only.
However, they also have open wheels, so they can launch each other, if a tire hits the tire of other car at the rear, like what happened to David Coulthard in the last "lucky-guy" accident.
Actually, now that you mention that, I don't know what happens when the flow is reversed over a car (if it spins 180 degrees), but I haven't seen cars flying in Indycar or CART this way. Does anybody knows what happens then? The diffuser, at least, would stop working, I think... actually, it would work in "reverse". Another point is what happens if an F1 car spins 90 degrees: what would do the shape of the car to its balance?
I also agree about the position of walls and their material. Here is a picture that shows how the car hit the "apex" of the wall, that forms part of an exit (it has an opening at the far side of the photo, where the yellow end of the wall is). It's clear the wall is "angled".
Mr. Kubitza did not have the chance to try to impact the wall laterally a little further down the track, because his car was airborne and, thus, uncontrollable. Anyway, the wall ceded very little... you can see that a block or two have been moved by the impact (directly to the left of the car). Sorry for the photo, I usually don't post this kind of images (taken from
http://www.kubicarobert.com/).