^^^
If it is creating downforce on the suspension arm it is the optimum place to do it for traction - hold the wheel onto the ground. It looks like it is doing that and also turning the plume slightly upwards towards the bottom of the beam wing.
The RB8 has almost the same brake ducts as the RB7, but I'm not really seeing the exhaust gasses being directed into the winglets. Looks like it's hitting the beam wing and directly under it. Below is a small but relevant image in relation to RB8 exhaust gasses.gilgen wrote:Have a look at the brake duct winglet, shown six pages back. This is shaped carbonfibre. The exhaust is blowing down on these winglets, and downforce from these would be far greater than blowing on the suspension arms.
Timstr wrote:Why do people think that blowing hot air onto a tiny brake-duct fin or on a suspension member will in itself create any meaningful downforce? None I think.
If you put the exhaust point blank infront of the brake fins, you'd be surprised how much downforce you'd get. The regs are what are stopping the pipes from coming anywhere close enough to blow transonic over the fins.Timstr wrote:Why do people think that blowing hot air onto a tiny brake-duct fin or on a suspension member will in itself create any meaningful downforce? None I think.
yes but you are missing Tims point that amount is much less than pulling more through the diffuser and beam wing area.Nickel wrote:Based on what do you think no meaningful down force is created? If air flows under the element faster than over it, down force is created, end of story.
Timstr wrote:Why do people think that blowing hot air onto a tiny brake-duct fin or on a suspension member will in itself create any meaningful downforce? None I think.
I think blowing in the area between the rear wheel and gearbox is to clean up and accelerate the airflow over the top of the diffuser so that air is extracted faster from underneath the diffuser. And that is the actual downforce creation.
I don't dispute at all the idea that energizing the flow over the top of the diffuser can help extract more air from under the floor. I have a bit of trouble with the concept that it cleans up the airflow though.flynfrog wrote: yes but you are missing Tims point that amount is much less than pulling more through the diffuser and beam wing area.
The control arm is aero neutral per the rules. If that is the case how do you get down-force?Nickel wrote: that the exhaust flows directly under it for "no meaningful downforce" unless you're arguing that this is simply to redirect the air at the diffuser.