You know absolutly nothing about methodology, do you think they put a new wing concept and bang it's spot on!
Your are trying to make an impression with your monkey and --- in every discussion, you're a child! Ridiculous.
YES! That's the whole --- point!chuckdanny wrote:Do you really think that the best way to have the big picture of a complex interacting system is to put all at once and either it works and you don't know why or it diverge (hit or miss like Platinumzealot says)
...and yet still somehow try to draw real-world conclusions from it anyway?chuckdanny wrote:He's telling me very seriously : they are no slots in your footplate, can you believe this! I've done the cad, i've got eyeballs mark I.
Cognitive dissonance: psychological conflict resulting from simultaneously held incongruous beliefs and attitude.chuckdanny wrote:Actually the suction peak is not where you think it is like on an old school wing. Ok i know the footplate is slotted and don't extend like that under the arches but...
What you call a "smear campaign," I call a "reality check."turbof1 wrote:Furthermore, splitting the topic and giving the topic title a subtle different name, will protect it from ranting that "it isn't worthwhile since you can't ever simulate the real deal". This topic descended into bickering due insistance of how "wrong" the project was. It is not wrong, and honestly I really don't appreciate the smear campaign against it.
That's a wholesale change in flow characteristics, and it was all because of a deformation that measured a scant 20mm. What do you think will happen to a guesswork model with even more variance?Honda R&D Technical Review 2009 wrote:When the vehicle is cornering, accelerating, or decelerating, the tires are constantly deformed due to vertical, lateral, and longitudinal forces.
[Methodology, including acquisition of real-world track data that showed a 20mm tire deformation]
The measured front tire shape was analyzed using CFD. This analysis showed that, in comparison to a tire with no side force acting on it, approximately 5% of the vehicle’s downforce was lost when a side force of 9000 N acted on the tire.
Figure 17 shows the total pressure distribution close to the road surface with and without a side force acting on the tire. The results show that the position of the separation point on the outboard-side wall of the tire moves back significantly when a side force acts on the tire. This backwards shift of the separation point changes the circulation around the tire in the XY planes, and the tire wake which previously flowed to the outboard of the vehicle now flows under the vehicle.
The fact that this reduces the dynamic pressure underneath the vehicle, resulting in a decline in downforce, can be seen from the change in the static pressure underneath the vehicle when the tire goes from a state of no side force to one in which side force is acting.
[...]
The attempt to develop a progressive refined simulation of a real world aerodynamic device is not "willful ignorance". We have no Idea how far ChuckDanny will choose to take his simulation. Experiments don't just arrive fully developed. They are performed, their results often found wanting, and then are refined. This iterative process entire, and not just the end result mind you, advances knowledge and insight of the subject at hand.bhall II wrote:What you call a "smear campaign," I call a "reality check."turbof1 wrote:Furthermore, splitting the topic and giving the topic title a subtle different name, will protect it from ranting that "it isn't worthwhile since you can't ever simulate the real deal". This topic descended into bickering due insistance of how "wrong" the project was. It is not wrong, and honestly I really don't appreciate the smear campaign against it.
If the idea here on this forum is to learn/discuss the technical aspects of Formula One, then we ought to look at the actual technical aspects of Formula One. You wouldn't practice for a basketball game by taking a cooking class, would you?
The cavalier attitudes that supported this project in its original context betray a staggering inability for some folks to fully appreciate how even minute alterations can have significant results.
Without taking everything into account, nothing can be gleaned from an inadequate experiment, because aerodynamic phenomena don't always show an intuitive linear progression from A to Z; sometimes things go from A to orange, and ignoring that reality doesn't mean it just goes away.
For example, here's a snippet from a study that included research into the effects of tire deformation on downforce.
That's a wholesale change in flow characteristics, and it was all because of a deformation that measured a scant 20mm. What do you think will happen to a guesswork model with even more variance?Honda R&D Technical Review 2009 wrote:When the vehicle is cornering, accelerating, or decelerating, the tires are constantly deformed due to vertical, lateral, and longitudinal forces.
[Methodology, including acquisition of real-world track data that showed a 20mm tire deformation]
The measured front tire shape was analyzed using CFD. This analysis showed that, in comparison to a tire with no side force acting on it, approximately 5% of the vehicle’s downforce was lost when a side force of 9000 N acted on the tire.
Figure 17 shows the total pressure distribution close to the road surface with and without a side force acting on the tire. The results show that the position of the separation point on the outboard-side wall of the tire moves back significantly when a side force acts on the tire. This backwards shift of the separation point changes the circulation around the tire in the XY planes, and the tire wake which previously flowed to the outboard of the vehicle now flows under the vehicle.
The fact that this reduces the dynamic pressure underneath the vehicle, resulting in a decline in downforce, can be seen from the change in the static pressure underneath the vehicle when the tire goes from a state of no side force to one in which side force is acting.
[...]
http://i.imgur.com/8ZQkKCE.jpg
The results won't even be indicative of Formula One, much less a specific car, and no one will have learned anything in the process.
I fully acknowledge that I've been an asshole here, and I apologize for the troubles. But, I defy anyone to bear witness to a flagrant display of willful ignorance and not get pissed off.
The whole point he is making is that you cannot model sub system A and then say this is what the system is doing, when you have neglected sub systems b through z. The effects of system is dependent on everything apart of it, and removing any one part of it means you have modeled a different system.eyalynf1 wrote: The attempt to develop a progressive refined simulation of a real world aerodynamic device is not "willful ignorance". We have no Idea how far ChuckDanny will choose to take his simulation. Experiments don't just arrive fully developed. They are performed, their results often found wanting, and then are refined. This iterative process entire, and not just the end result mind you, advances knowledge and insight of the subject at hand.
bhall II wrote:Everything beyond the suction peak is, by definition, an adverse pressure gradient. Otherwise, there would be no flow separation.
Because they constitute downstream blockages that inevitably slow down upstream flow, i.e. increase static pressure, the front wheels contribute to the separation of the vortices by pushing the suction peak forward, which reduces the efficiency of the wing.
It is my contention that the application of steering lock more or less removes those blockages to at least some degree, allowing the suction peak to travel aft as air flow accelerates. This increases the efficiency of the wing.
I think that enhancing this transient property is the whole point of the updated wing. I also think it's next to impossible to model this transient property without data we will almost certainly never see.
Those pressure map you talking about. Could you describe source or any other vital simulation information (car, conditions, air, boundarys) form this image?bhall II wrote:I was recently reminded of a pressure map that, while far from definitive, may represent the closest I'll ever get to validating my theory.
As a refresher...http://i.imgur.com/zGd4q6B.jpgbhall II wrote:Everything beyond the suction peak is, by definition, an adverse pressure gradient. Otherwise, there would be no flow separation.
Because they constitute downstream blockages that inevitably slow down upstream flow, i.e. increase static pressure, the front wheels contribute to the separation of the vortices by pushing the suction peak forward, which reduces the efficiency of the wing.
It is my contention that the application of steering lock more or less removes those blockages to at least some degree, allowing the suction peak to travel aft as air flow accelerates. This increases the efficiency of the wing.
I think that enhancing this transient property is the whole point of the updated wing. I also think it's next to impossible to model this transient property without data we will almost certainly never see.
Within the box, you can see that pressure increases in the same direction as flow, forming the adverse pressure gradient that eventually causes flow separation.
You can see the high-pressure areas in front of the wheels that reduce the efficiency of the wing and contribute to separation.
While there's no steering lock applied to the wheels, this pressure map is taken from a simulation that modeled the effect of crosswind on the car. The resulting flow pattern removes the downstream blockages caused by the wheels in much the same way as the application of steering lock, and you can see reduced pressure in those areas indicative of faster/greater air flow.
These things more or less inform my theory that the wider end plates on the new wing increase efficiency by reducing the steering angle change required to remove detrimental blockages.