It's inevitable. Think of it this way: when the front wheels are aligned straight, the efficiency of both end plates is compromised, and the front wing's total downforce production reflects that. When the steering angle changes, the blockage behind the outside end plate is removed, which increases its efficiency. At that point, you have one compromised end plate and one uncompromised end plate. In other words, the efficiency of one end plate stays the same while the other becomes more efficient. Combined, it results in a net downforce gain. I think.wesley123 wrote:I'm not entirely sure. When the wheel is turned, one part of the wing is blocked less, while the other is not. This leaves for a inconsistency in downforce production when the steering is changed(as you have pointed out). I find it hard to figure out of they actually make more downforce when turning because of this inconsistency.
Maybe these images will make it easier to see. (The last image is the McLaren front wing for added context.)They both will still have the same area of blockage. The W05 wing has less wing area to create downforce on. Thus I'd say is less affected by these changes(Is that exactly what you are saying?) in steering, or even pitch.
I might have different thoughts on that. This paper on wheel-wing interaction draws somewhat different conclusions. In short, teams try to use the vortex on the outside edge of the tire's contact patch to "pull" air flow over/under the wing, not the other way around. Nonetheless, the details of that particular discussion are way over my head, because we'd have to start talking about brake ducts and whatnot, and I haven't updated my bio-CFD to the latest release yet.Seeing how these outboard wings(And they certainly did last year) create a low pressure zone on the outside of the wing this pulls the dirty air from the wheel with it, away from the floor. This is beneficial further down the car as the floor isn't affected as much from the dirty air from the front wheels. It's not surprising that teams experiment by ducting air through the front brake/hub assembly to augment this.
About the wing being simpler, I think you are over thinking this. Their wing actually has a lower angle of attack than the mercedes and RB wing etc. The main inside planes of the wing do not go to the maximum height and with the lower angle of attack will generate less downforce but as a result have a less turbulent effect on the airflow going on the inside of the wheel. Essentially less work is being done to the airflow there. However on the outside sections yes the span is wider. This is to make up for the slight downforce reduction from the inside section of the wing while sacrificing a bit of flow going outward of the front tyre.turbof1 wrote:I have difficulties to believe this theory. Sorry bhall, it's a well thought-through hypothesis, but it has hiates.
-The biggest issue is that a turned wheel, while having less influence on the front wing itself, creates a blockade on the outside of the wing for airflow going around the tyre. The is airflow is critical for rear downforce. What you gain in front, is what you'll loose at the rear, creating imbalance.
-While teams very much attempt to have consistent downforce and try to achieve this through keeping the wheel wake from influencing the FW, there's also a secondary use: wheel wake is very, very draggy. On straights you want to keep airflow from hitting the tyre because every bit of volume that can be avoided, will be avoided. Even at the cost of peak downforce.
-If we follow your hypthesis, then one wheel will be turned outboard and the other inboard. The latter creates a larger blockade then in non-turned stance.
Teams obviously do consider how a turned wheel influences the airflow and downforce consistency, but I think it's more a case of finding ways to get airflow around an outwards turned wheel.
My honest opinion? Ferrari have a bigger span because they have to keep the wing simple. If they try something more complex, they get lost in correlation issues.
Quick and dirty: low-radius outer wing = consistent downforce; high-radius outer wing = more downforcef1316 wrote:One thing I don't understand, however, is that last season I distinctly remember Ferrari saying that they had stopped chasing maximum peak downforce in favour of more consistent downforce.
If their philosophy is consciously as described in this thread, that would imply that they'd changed their minds again and are back to a more 'peaky' approach.
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I'm not exactly clear on what you're trying to say, so if I miss something, let me know.turbof1 wrote:I have difficulties to believe this theory. Sorry bhall, it's a well thought-through hypothesis, but it has hiates.
-The biggest issue is that a turned wheel, while having less influence on the front wing itself, creates a blockade on the outside of the wing for airflow going around the tyre. The is airflow is critical for rear downforce. What you gain in front, is what you'll loose at the rear, creating imbalance.
-While teams very much attempt to have consistent downforce and try to achieve this through keeping the wheel wake from influencing the FW, there's also a secondary use: wheel wake is very, very draggy. On straights you want to keep airflow from hitting the tyre because every bit of volume that can be avoided, will be avoided. Even at the cost of peak downforce.
-If we follow your hypthesis, then one wheel will be turned outboard and the other inboard. The latter creates a larger blockade then in non-turned stance.
Teams obviously do consider how a turned wheel influences the airflow and downforce consistency, but I think it's more a case of finding ways to get airflow around an outwards turned wheel.
My honest opinion? Ferrari have a bigger span because they have to keep the wing simple. If they try something more complex, they get lost in correlation issues.
And finally, you too should check out this paper. It says a whole lot about this very subject.Crucial_Xtreme wrote:
I think the term "reductio ad absurdum" fits here. Saying that a low radius outer wing results in more consistent downforce while saying that a high radius outer wing results in more peaky downforce is simply a flat out fallacy. Please for the love of the world please explain where you got this theory from?bhall II wrote:Quick and dirty: low-radius outer wing = consistent downforce; high-radius outer wing = more downforcef1316 wrote:One thing I don't understand, however, is that last season I distinctly remember Ferrari saying that they had stopped chasing maximum peak downforce in favour of more consistent downforce.
If their philosophy is consciously as described in this thread, that would imply that they'd changed their minds again and are back to a more 'peaky' approach.
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Take the W05 as an example of consistency.
http://i.imgur.com/irHij8a.jpg
The RB10 is an example of more downforce.
http://i.imgur.com/RP0BIUM.jpg
The nearly-straight outer wing of the F138 represented an attempt for more downforce.
http://i.imgur.com/PS7Zm6N.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/lJwaL8Q.jpg
The F14T, on the other hand, has a lower radius than its predecessor.
http://i.imgur.com/7qvHtV5.jpg
In other words, the F14T attempts to make more consistent downforce than the F138, but it still attempts to make more downforce than the W05. Everything is relative.
True, but doesn't stop teams trying to negate the negative effects. Until this year they had a very large wing at their disposal that even when turning covered the wheel most of the time. This year that is of course lessened, but teams will still try to push airflow around the wheel, reconnecting it back at the base of the sidepods, even when turning (especially when turning). It gives maximal airflow on top of the floor, minimal to the wheel (well atleast that is the intent).- Until someone figures out how to steer a car without momentarily altering the alignment of the front wheels, steering will always have a dynamic effect on downforce. It's inevitable.
Please read everything I've said on the subject, not just my admittedly quick and dirty reply to a question. By not repeating everything I've said every time I respond to something, I'm operating on the assumption that others have been following the entire conversation.trinidefender wrote:I think the term "reductio ad absurdum" fits here. Saying that a low radius outer wing results in more consistent downforce while saying that a high radius outer wing results in more peaky downforce is simply a flat out fallacy. Please for the love of the world please explain where you got this theory from?
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This is the part I wanted you to see in the Gary Anderson piece.turbof1 wrote:What Gary said in that piece was right (not often I say that about him), but again the conclusion is that the cascade is one tool, not the tool.
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Well, you have outwash the drag reductor, but you also have outwash the bend-air-around-the-tyre-to-reconnect-behind-it thingy, and outwash the expansion of air to make a wing larger then it is. I think we are talking among people who are clear-minded enough to understand that.bhall II wrote:I noticed that. McCabism is where I got the paper in the first place!![]()
In any case, what I'm describing is what "outwash" has always meant. It just got reduced in conversation to somehow mean "drag reduction." I mean, it is drag reduction in a sense, because the wings don't inflict a big induced drag penalty along straights, as they're not at full efficiency. But, it's mostly about maximizing downforce within rules that made it easy to dump air flow around the outside of the wheels. In fact, the new narrower wings are a direct response to the massive downforce created by the 2009-2013 outwash designs.
I understand that you are talking about steering angle change and how it effects the downforce created by the front wing but you are only thinking in 2D of moving the air outside the wheel laterally. Airflow is a 3D concept, the airflow can move up and over or up and to he side more which is what I think Red Bull and Ferrari are trying to do more than just move the air laterally what Mercedes and McLaren to a large degree are doing with their philosophy.bhall II wrote:Please read everything I've said on the subject, not just my admittedly quick and dirty reply to a question. By not repeating everything I've said every time I respond to something, I'm operating on the assumption that others have been following the entire conversation.trinidefender wrote:I think the term "reductio ad absurdum" fits here. Saying that a low radius outer wing results in more consistent downforce while saying that a high radius outer wing results in more peaky downforce is simply a flat out fallacy. Please for the love of the world please explain where you got this theory from?
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