From an example study in McBeath's Competition Car Aerodynamics:autogyro wrote:
Add them to an inefficient wing with high drag and they increase DF which also increases drag if compared to the original wing.
Wow, someone had better tell birds that their wings are incomplete...However there is actualy no comparison, because without the end plates the wing would be an incomplete design and not subject to comparison in any meaningful way.
I was thinking of the rear wing not the front wing.Just_a_fan wrote:From an example study in McBeath's Competition Car Aerodynamics:autogyro wrote:
Add them to an inefficient wing with high drag and they increase DF which also increases drag if compared to the original wing.
No endplate: downforce = 769.2N, drag = 194.8N
large endplate: downforce = 900.1N, drag = 178.1N
Yes for the wing but what about drag for the complete car?
Ooh look! A major increase in downforce with a significant reduction in drag.Wow, someone had better tell birds that their wings are incomplete...
However there is actualy no comparison, because without the end plates the wing would be an incomplete design and not subject to comparison in any meaningful way.
It's a bit late for that...F1_eng wrote: I am not going to talk anyone down on here without them being here to defend themselves, it is just a warning.
Where is the power being supplied from?xpensive wrote:Speeding up the air under the car does not consume power? I think not.ringo wrote: The other part concerning the expansion of the air in the diffuser. A diffuser is a steady state device so it does not consume work. So it does not consume power.
Power is Volumetric flow times Pressure differential, that rarely comes for free. If air-speed under the car is 20 m/s higher than above, there's a price for it, one way or the other,
Oh I thank you, you just proved my point to perfection, a 7.6 kW loss at a speed of 216 km/h makes perfect sense!ringo wrote:Where is the power being supplied from?xpensive wrote:Speeding up the air under the car does not consume power? I think not.ringo wrote: The other part concerning the expansion of the air in the diffuser. A diffuser is a steady state device so it does not consume work. So it does not consume power.
Power is Volumetric flow times Pressure differential, that rarely comes for free. If air-speed under the car is 20 m/s higher than above, there's a price for it, one way or the other,
If you do that calculation you will get wrong results for what you think the diffuser is taking up.
example: say a diffuser that's .75m x .2m at the back and .75m x .05m at the throat.
it's understood, one pressure will be 4 times the other looking at the area ratios.
if the car is moving at 60m/s, under it as you say would be 20 more, so 80m/s.
volumetric flow = A x V = 0.0375 x 80 = 0.3 m3/s end pressure is atmospheric, so throat presure is Patm/4, so differential = 101325 Pascal x (1 -1/4) = 25331.25 Pa
power taken = 25331.25Pa x .3m^3/s = 7599.375W = 7.6kW, which is 10hp, which is not true for a diffuser. This is a wrong application.
If i put a diffuser on my road car and i was driving at that speed, i don't think it will rob my car of 10 horsepower.
A diffuser is adiabatic, there are no external forces imparted on the fluid, so there is no work hence no power use. This is why diffusers are put on industrial gas turbines as well.
Maybe i misunderstood what you were referring to, maybe what happens after that air leaves the diffuser, but within the diffuser itself no work is done on the fluid.
For work to be done energy has to cross the boundaries of the system. In the case of the diffuser system, no energy crosses it. Air simply enters and leaves, with viscous effects and other things taking place within the fluid, but not across the system boundary, to be strict in a thermodynamic sense.
I agree that It's not free, not because of it's function, but only because of what is required of the shape of the car to make it effective.
F1_eng wrote:PDEs are where the fun starts
I was responding to a sweeping generalisation with a similar, although slightly more focussed generalisation.ringo wrote:End plates increase lift distribution but do produce some drag, especially if they are poorly designed.
Most aircraft avoid using end plates. They have to be well developed before they are considered beneficial, since fuel consumption is most important.
I think what autogyro is saying is that if there is a vehicles that is optimally designed. There is a point where any further attempt to increase down-force would result in an increase of drag. A good example is the RB6
We can't look at poorly designed systems that can pick up improvements in drag and lift,only because they were crappily designed to begin with. A good example the HRT, which can make improvements of lift and drag with no penalty because it wasn't optimal at all.
=D> Ok, so it means if a diffuser takes power, then conversely ,a nozzle would give the car 10hp then!xpensive wrote:Oh I thank you, you just proved my point to perfection, a 7.6 kW loss at a speed of 216 km/h makes perfect sense!ringo wrote:
Where is the power being supplied from?
If you do that calculation you will get wrong results for what you think the diffuser is taking up.
example: say a diffuser that's .75m x .2m at the back and .75m x .05m at the throat.
it's understood, one pressure will be 4 times the other looking at the area ratios.
if the car is moving at 60m/s, under it as you say would be 20 more, so 80m/s.
volumetric flow = A x V = 0.0375 x 80 = 0.3 m3/s end pressure is atmospheric, so throat presure is Patm/4, so differential = 101325 Pascal x (1 -1/4) = 25331.25 Pa
power taken = 25331.25Pa x .3m^3/s = 7599.375W = 7.6kW, which is 10hp, which is not true for a diffuser. This is a wrong application.
If i put a diffuser on my road car and i was driving at that speed, i don't think it will rob my car of 10 horsepower.
A diffuser is adiabatic, there are no external forces imparted on the fluid, so there is no work hence no power use. This is why diffusers are put on industrial gas turbines as well.
Maybe i misunderstood what you were referring to, maybe what happens after that air leaves the diffuser, but within the diffuser itself no work is done on the fluid.
For work to be done energy has to cross the boundaries of the system. In the case of the diffuser system, no energy crosses it. Air simply enters and leaves, with viscous effects and other things taking place within the fluid, but not across the system boundary, to be strict in a thermodynamic sense.
I agree that It's not free, not because of it's function, but only because of what is required of the shape of the car to make it effective.