Vanja #66 wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 08:26
ringo wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 05:57
The road. You have the standing air over the ground. the floor of the car will exert a shear force on the air and shear it across the road. A shear force profile will develop between the floor and the road.
The road is very bumpy compared to the floor so i suspect turbulence.
It's an interesting thing to imagine, but its not the same as the text book boundary layer interacting with one surface.
compressible Couette flow
In the example of Couette flow you've given, there is no fluid movement on the stationary plate (i.e. road surface) so there is no boundary layer formation. This is well known.
https://i.ibb.co/p6qXG1n/640px-Laminar-shear-svg.png
Couette flow is not entirely comparable to floor going over the road, as Couette flow is stationary flow. And car racing is anything but stationary...
S E C T I O wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 07:24
Sorry if I ask you directly, but I see that beyond knowledge,you have kindness and patience, and sorry if it's a stupid question,i'm not a technic guy.Few years ago a type of swimsuit was unveiled,that reduced drag in the water so much that it was then banned. I thought it would be shortly before seeing similar concepts applied to the surfaces of an F1 to slow down / accelerate the flow in the various areas of the bodywork,where it is needed, but none of this has happened, is there a specific reason for this? Maybe the rules?Thanks if you would like to reply and still sorry for your time.
Never apologize for asking questions.
It's the rules, yes, such surface treatment of F1 bodywork would consistute uneven surfaces which would go against the minimal bodywork radii rules. If a team would try to explain this as surface manufacturing imperfections, the pattern would clearly be visible and FIA woudn't accept this explanation. It's very likely one or more teams have tried doing this years ago, but the FIA stopped them right away.
Looking at it from a practical perspective any airflow on the track surface caused by the cars is more likely to move ahead of the car (like a bow wave on a boat); however, that would be a single car on a still day with zero temperature difference between ambient air and track surface. In essence the car would push any static air (or boundary layer phenomenon) out of the way - before it interacted with the under car flow.
In reality…
There will never be static air on the track surface, there will always be some measurable breeze, a temperature difference between air and track surface or other cars on track.
On porpoising….
Normally the car will be pushed onto the track through the centre of pressure, if that is located forward of the CoG the front of the car will tend to fully compress first, followed by the rear. If the ‘choke’ is caused by the rear of the car being pushed to the ground, the cycle begins!! If the ‘choke’ is caused by the front of the car being pushed to the ground, it will create a cycle that only really exhibits on the front axle (so the car will look as though it is bouncing).
If the CoP is behind the CoG the car will be pushed to the ground in the opposite order, if the ‘choke’ is caused by the rear of the car being pushed into the ground, the rear axle will experience this same bouncing motion; if the ‘choke’ is caused by the front of the car being pushed into the ground, it will only then start to porpoise. However this will be in the opposite direction to the previous example.
To a degree if you only have the single axle bounce it can be controlled by ride height, bump rubbers, etc. if you have the full monty, no amount of passive suspension will control it (while allowing the car to be drivable at racing speeds), it is a purely aerodynamic issue (essentially the car CoP or CoG needs to be moved).
It is entirely possible that Mercedes deliberately ran a set-up that allowed the porpoising (also - fuel levels impact CoG…), which would be the ultimate sandbagging
It is also highly likely that ‘some’ rake could totally cure the problem (a la RedBull day 3).
Perspective - Understanding that sometimes the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view.