Belatti wrote:Im no aerodynamicist but I will agree with you Ogami.
A single air particle in its way form the front to the rear of the car, has to travel arround many "aero" car arts that disturbs its way. I think that the whole design of the car can make that while speed increases, some of those car aero parts sends those particles to somewhere that decreases -or not- the efficiency of the aero part that is a bit rearward.
Its a system connected in a series, if you will. So it can happen that a system -a car- can work perfectly at 150kph and then have disrruptions that decreases its DF at 250kph to -maybe- recover at 300kph. I think that that may happen to boundary layers braking here and there.
A good example is some touring cars I have worke with, where a car shape that could not be changed, had a larg DF drop between 170kph and 200, to regain a lot of DF beyond 210kph...
What I IMHO get from this statement is that its wrong. Of course the behavior changes... Isnt a wing stalling or a boundary layer separation point shifting a behavior change?Ogami musashi wrote: The fluids mechanics in themselves do not change their behavior along speed for race cars speeds.
No no, what i meant is that downforce (the phenomenon) doesn't change with speed for race car speeds.Belatti wrote:Sorry, when I wrote "but I will agree with you Ogami" I meant "but I will not agree with you Ogami"
What I IMHO get from this statement is that its wrong. Of course the behavior changes... Isnt a wing stalling or a boundary layer separation point shifting a behavior change?Ogami musashi wrote: The fluids mechanics in themselves do not change their behavior along speed for race cars speeds.
As far as I can see, aerodynamics is like in any other system you engineer: a number of elements working together that has relatives dependances on each other. When there are elements that works in series, like in a chain you know what a faulty link would do to that system.
And there is nothing parabolic in that.
Typically, lift and drag coefficients (C_L and C_D) are a function of Reynold's number, so even individual components can be affected by velocity as the flow can separate, vorticity can occur, etc. Depending on the component, this effect can be dramatic or barely noticeable. It's not necessarily a black/white thing.Ogami musashi wrote:... for a given airfoil at a given AOA and into the racecars typical speeds there's NO changes of behavior (no stall,no turbulence development or whatsoever) due to increase in speed ...
Sorry but it is impossible to converse with someone who believes that aerodynamics is the prime religion, not only for humans but for all forms of life.Ogami musashi wrote:That's completely irrelevant to the topic and a continuity of your personal attacks since several posts.
the FACTS (that we can see) are that for a given airfoil at a given AOA and into the racecars typical speeds there's NO changes of behavior (no stall,no turbulence development or whatsoever) due to increase in speed.
The other fact is that aero maps show differences in downforce with ride height changes as well as AOA changes (attitude of the car that changes the AOA of the wing)
The correlation between the two is simple: With speed, reactions of the car (mechanical) are different (ride height and AOA), thus aerodynamics change, which in turn changes downforce.
There's no such thing with truth, theory,practice, myth or whatever you want, those are facts that anybody with enough knowledge to interpret them can see, be it an engineer, a driver, a donkey or anything else.
autogyro wrote:
Sorry but it is impossible to converse with someone who believes that aerodynamics is the prime religion, not only for humans but for all forms of life.
Unfortunately it shows the dismal state F1 has descended to.
I totally agree, but race car speeds (and sizes) do not imply big changes in flow behaviors due to speed.Mystery Steve wrote:Typically, lift and drag coefficients (C_L and C_D) are a function of Reynold's number, so even individual components can be affected by velocity as the flow can separate, vorticity can occur, etc. Depending on the component, this effect can be dramatic or barely noticeable. It's not necessarily a black/white thing.Ogami musashi wrote:... for a given airfoil at a given AOA and into the racecars typical speeds there's NO changes of behavior (no stall,no turbulence development or whatsoever) due to increase in speed ...
Birds seem to enjoy it...autogyro wrote:
Sorry but it is impossible to converse with someone who believes that aerodynamics is the prime religion, not only for humans but for all forms of life.
Unfortunately it shows the dismal state F1 has descended to.