Some stuff from the Renault thread...
mith wrote:I wonder about one additional thing. If all that previous speculations are correct, how are they making hot air travel under the floor to the diffuser, when exhaust pipes are pointed sideways rather then directly to the back? Wouldn't it make it escape at sides instead of going to the back of the car?
The car has considerable foward motion remember, with a great deal of air being sucked under the car. I see no reason why the exhaust gases should not be being drawn under the car also. They have made the cut out to put it under the side pods, you can see that from the images.
steveB wrote:Rather than the exhaust outlet being designed for aerodynamic flow purposes, could it be that the intention of placing the outlets where they are is to......heat up the track, to give a massive advantage on rear wheel adhesion on low track temperature circuits ?
I'd be surprised if you could make a significant impact on track temperature in such a short amount of time, TBH.
Pup wrote:If it works the way I think it does (no guarantees implied or otherwise), then I think it's more like a wing turned sideways, drawing air from the sides rather than from above or below. So we're talking about just increasing the pressure on top of the diffuser/floor rather than decreasing it underneath.
Can you explain a bit more about how this works? Would such an approach not be easier just blowing over the top, or something nearby to the top of the diffuser?
Pup wrote:I don't think there's a problem with the boundary layer detaching under floor, since the rake isn't all that. Maybe at the diffuser, maybe back when they were much larger. So I think blowing the exhaust under the floor would be entirely counter-productive.
I'm not talking about shedding, in fact the opposite. I was thinking that the hot air might stop a boundary layer forming allowing a more uniform air flow under the car.
Now from this thread.
manchild wrote:It has splitter within, and it is positioned so that exhaust gasses are split by the floor, so part of the them goes below the floor, part above = virtual skirts.
How does that work though - how do you stop the two air streams mixing? It's not as if one is oil and one is water.