Because gurneys are a very inefficient way of generating downforce. Got a link to the pic of the RB one?SiLo wrote:Why do they not have a gurney flap on their rear wing? The one on RB is quite prominent.
Because gurneys are a very inefficient way of generating downforce. Got a link to the pic of the RB one?SiLo wrote:Why do they not have a gurney flap on their rear wing? The one on RB is quite prominent.
n smikle wrote:Comparing with cars without U side-pods obviously.alelanza wrote:That's impossiblen smikle wrote:... you can crank up the wings and not face the drag penalty.
You can run higher AoA on the flap because the body of the car has less drag than cars without U sidepods. Very straight forward.
From Drag increases with the square of speed, and is proportional to the CSA. So it is easy to cut a big azz chunk out of the Cross sectional area of the car to lower the drag.
A nice graph from Wiki (I know, right?) This is from an aeroplane so you have to do some interpretation as the wings of an F1 car are fixed in normal circumstances.
Just subtract whatever percentage you want from the green graph, and you see the effect on the total drag. ESPECIALLY at high speeds the biggest difference is seen. (look how high the form drag is at high speeds! much higher than induced drag). So you can see the U-pods is a very potent weapon.
Now with that done - and you car is accelerating pretty fast down the straights and you have the perfect balance of speed through the turns... Why take away the down-force?
N_Smikle ignores the fact that airplanes trim wing as speed increases I think we can all agree that's quite illegal in F1 making the graph worse than useless. The induced drag also increases with the square of speed in an f1 car(ignoring the DRS of course).So, while the U pods may help with drag(I doubt it, as they have just as large of openings as other top teams)but they're main purpose is to get more flow to the beam wing, increasing it's usefulness.shelly wrote:n_smikle, the graph you posted is relative to an airplane which has to sustain its weight with lift. It can then use lower cl at higher speed, thus reducing induced drag.
So it can not be interpreted for f1 cars: it just does not apply to them, because as you said, their wings are fixed.
Agree that if your bodywork has less drag, you can use that bonus for adding downforce via the wings.
U shaped sidepods have less frontal area, but that does not automatically imply that they are less draggy than conventional shaped sidepods, being Drag= S*c_d.
By the way I agree that they are probably less draggy than ferrari's for example.
On interesting aspect is that u sidepods could also produce less lift than a conventional shape, because of the limited low pressure zone on the top leading edge.
Mclaren worked a lot in this zone also last year with "normal" sidepods, introducing that upper slot that ferrari has recently copied (see f150 thread) and that should have the main function of destroying lift generated by the upper part of the sidepod
It looked like both McLarens used the smaller rear wing. Hamilton was only 4-6 kph slower than the frontrunners, not a big difference. Therefore McLaren appears to be converging toward the same downforce/drag tradeoff as everyone else. OK, I'm still rooting for Hamilton!! Or maybe Massa until he is told to move over for Alonso!!bill shoe wrote:The large McLaren wing appears clearly taller (thicker cord) than other frontrunner Canada wings. I am comfortable assuming it makes more downforce and drag.
I still like raymondu999's comment that McLaren may be using more wing to create less sliding/wear on the tires during the race.
If you look at P3 both McLarens were about 1 sec off Vettel's time. The fastest car through the trap was a Toro Roso at 327 kph. Vettel (typical frontrunner wing) was 320. Button was 317, Hamilton was 308!!!
I think Hamilton and Button must have been running a split wing strategy if they had similar lap times with such large trap differences.
Will be interesting during qualy to see McLaren wing sizes and compare trap speeds.
Edit: removed my crappy Massa joke.It wasn't funny anyways. But , back on topic: Mclaren seem lost this weekend. No top speed, but no grip in the corners either, strange, very un-Mclaren.bill shoe wrote:It looked like both McLarens used the smaller rear wing. Hamilton was only 4-6 kph slower than the frontrunners, not a big difference. Therefore McLaren appears to be converging toward the same downforce/drag tradeoff as everyone else. OK, I'm still rooting for Hamilton!! Or maybe Massa until he is told to move over for Alonso!!bill shoe wrote:The large McLaren wing appears clearly taller (thicker cord) than other frontrunner Canada wings. I am comfortable assuming it makes more downforce and drag.
I still like raymondu999's comment that McLaren may be using more wing to create less sliding/wear on the tires during the race.
If you look at P3 both McLarens were about 1 sec off Vettel's time. The fastest car through the trap was a Toro Roso at 327 kph. Vettel (typical frontrunner wing) was 320. Button was 317, Hamilton was 308!!!
I think Hamilton and Button must have been running a split wing strategy if they had similar lap times with such large trap differences.
Will be interesting during qualy to see McLaren wing sizes and compare trap speeds.
You are ignoring the fact, that I have already stated that fact in that post. Talk about glossing over posts.Pierce89 wrote:n smikle wrote: N_Smikle ignores the fact that airplanes trim wing as speed increases I think we can all agree that's quite illegal in F1 making the graph worse than useless. The induced drag also increases with the square of speed in an f1 car(ignoring the DRS of course).So, while the U pods may help with drag(I doubt it, as they have just as large of openings as other top teams)but they're main purpose is to get more flow to the beam wing, increasing it's usefulness.
Then why the worthless graph with zero relevance to F1?n smikle wrote:You are ignoring the fact, that I have already stated that fact in that post. Talk about glossing over posts.Pierce89 wrote:n smikle wrote: N_Smikle ignores the fact that airplanes trim wing as speed increases I think we can all agree that's quite illegal in F1 making the graph worse than useless. The induced drag also increases with the square of speed in an f1 car(ignoring the DRS of course).So, while the U pods may help with drag(I doubt it, as they have just as large of openings as other top teams)but they're main purpose is to get more flow to the beam wing, increasing it's usefulness.
Hamilton says the 7th gear is too Long. The car is drag limited and not to mention it's top speed is lower.Pierce89 wrote:Rather than getting the compromise wrong and having to much top speed, or to much downforce, it seems like something small went wrong somwhere on their Canada package and hurt their aero efficiency. They don't have any top speed or any downforce. It's really strange. I really believe there is some small error in their Canada specific low drag package, or they've made some error in set-up, but Lewis didn't seem to think things are working right.