Is there any chance that road car rake is all about styling or aero drag/fuel milage?
Brian
It uses the exhaust flow to create a much deeper/higher diffuser using the exhaust as an artificial barrier extending much lower to the track than what the regulations allow the actual diffuser extend to. The FIA only allows the diffuser to be confined to a very shallow dimension ( i dont know the dimensions off the top of my head) So lets say that the current diffuser is only 12cm high according to whatever the regulations are... the exhaust flow now extends the sides of the diffuser all the way to the ground/track adding additional volume to the diffuser as long as the exhaust is blowing through it.hardingfv32 wrote:AbbaleRacing77
Exactly how does the "super" diffuser use the exhaust flow to its benefit?
Brian
The M5 has a flat bottom made of plastic panels. It is interesting to me because not all supercars have a significant rake angle, some have leveled bottoms, like the Veyron. I guess it is just up to the designer of the car.Owen.C93 wrote:You can't really measure rake on a car from a photo since you can't see the chassis. It could just have low body work on the front end etc. Luckily on F1 the floor has to be flat which helps.
n smikle wrote:I think BMW designs it's road cars with a heavy rake. Cadillac and Chevrolet as well. SO I guess those manaufacturers thought a COG raise of a cm or two is not so detrimental when you get such a benefit in high speed stability.AbbaleRacing77 wrote:
Heres what redbull is effectively doing to artificially create a diffuser thats almost twice as big as it should be. Ferrari and Mclaren are also effectively doing this yet they are still lacking downforce somewhere else. Ive already mentioned this before but the Red areas in the photo are the areas where the exhaust is getting blown in order to create a artificial barrier. This combined with super high rake creates one giant diffuser. Now... USUALLY general racing principals and common sense tells us that a high amount of rake is not beneficial because fundamentally you want the car to be designed and balanced with a rake that is level for CoG reasoning and a more harmonious suspension setup under motion changes. Normally a car with high rake like this is really badly design and using high rake to compensate for huge amounts of understeer but tends to be snappy mid corner. Red bull have designed there whole car around this super diffuser so that the car and aero are designed to be tilted way up in the air, making this whole crazy diffuser work well with there package. Kinda cool
With a middle engine car the raise is COG height is gonna be a bit more as expected but hey Newey made it work! I want to see if this is the next "fad" for 2012.
It sounds like they're rehashing a watered down version of some of the conclusions we came up with in the EBD thread.dren wrote:That's a good picture, explains everything well.
Apart from that, designers automatically design in a lower stance at the front, as it makes the car appear to be going fast, even when standing still. It is basically a design trick, in road cars, where diffussers have little or no relevance. They are cosmetic, except for a few supercars.spinmastermic wrote:Road cars are raked to account for extra loading. The rear axle takes most of the load from rear passengers and what goes in the boot/trunk. This has to be accounted for. Put 4 adults in that BMW and the rake angle will get smaller.