Trying to wrap my head around what I view as two very different ideologies in underbody design.
Internal and external aerodynamics has been fundamentally one of my weak points, never took any classes regarding it. I do know a little. Let me run my understanding of this stuff by, correct me where I'm wrong.
In F1 the underbody and rear "diffuser" create heaps of downforce. As I understand this is mostly because you're effectively creating an airfoil out of the bottom, particularly if the car pitches forward on the brakes. Having the diffuser channels shaped the way they are promotes vortex generation.. allowing the diffuser to run at a real high diverging angle without stalling (breaking up / energizing boundary layer?). Also some decrease in drag by returning the underbody flow to somewhere closer to freestream (though I'd think the big upswirling vortices would negate this.. as opposed to smooth laminar flow?)
Even with most of the bottom of the car being flat I'd imagine you get most of the downforce from a "venturi" effect under the car and upping the velocity to decrease pressure. Not the best venturi since the sides can't be sealed by regs, but not bad nonetheless.
Here is where I get tripped up.. how do you feed that underbody and venturi effectively? I'd think you'd want a "backwards diffuser" toward the front of the car and on the leading edge of the sidepods to ram air under there, and up the air velocity. Ie if you can't feed it, what good is it? But I dont know mucha bout how those forward edges are shaped.
Take a polar opposite though - Nascar. Laugh as you may, aero is a major setup concern in the series, which is why on some tracks they ride on bumpstops the whole damn time. The front splitter is a big deal, and getting the ride height as absolutely low as possible to build up all that stagnation pressure on the top of the splitter, and stop any air from getting under the car.. starving it for air rather than force feeding it.
Why would you do this? I tried looking up some Nascar regs but couldn't find much. I assume they are not allowed to run a flat, smooth underbody and has to be all exposed crap. If that were the case I could see that lots of airflow under the car would just become turbulent rapidly and increase pressure.. raising drag and lift.
So is it just a polar opposite design choice with no middle ground? If you can run a flat underbody and diffuser, get the air down there.. otherwise choke it completely?