Front wing outwash flaps design

Here are our CFD links and discussions about aerodynamics, suspension, driver safety and tyres. Please stick to F1 on this forum.
Post Reply
ahmedshafie
2
Joined: 20 Jan 2021, 10:18

Front wing outwash flaps design

Post

hi , im search for info about designing outwash flaps ? any data their about how curvature of flaps are designed ? i read about morphism , span wise bending , chord wise bending and twist .

User avatar
Steven
Owner
Joined: 19 Aug 2002, 18:32
Location: Belgium
Contact:

Re: Front wing outwash flaps design

Post

What exactly are you looking for?
Did you check the regulation's boundaries?

Is your question about how aerodynamicsts define the basic shape of wings before doing iterations to improve them through small changes?

ahmedshafie
2
Joined: 20 Jan 2021, 10:18

Re: Front wing outwash flaps design

Post

Steven wrote:
20 Jan 2021, 12:24
What exactly are you looking for?
Did you check the regulation's boundaries?

Is your question about how aerodynamicsts define the basic shape of wings before doing iterations to improve them through small changes?
Thanks for your reply ,
sure i checked the boundries

yes im trying to know about the basic shape , i can see there are twist and bends to make outwash , but what are the basics for this design so i can reach something like this or near it .

also i want to know how y250 section is designed ? dimensions angles

ahmedshafie
2
Joined: 20 Jan 2021, 10:18

Re: Front wing outwash flaps design

Post

Steven wrote:
20 Jan 2021, 12:24
What exactly are you looking for?
Did you check the regulation's boundaries?

Is your question about how aerodynamicsts define the basic shape of wings before doing iterations to improve them through small changes?
i ve read that flaps are made swept , but i dont know why ? i know for plane are made that for stability and delay shock , also these flaps are bend but i dont know if its chord wise or span wise bend or both and i dont know why too , i know that with bending it will inc surface area leading to increasing downforce . so are these only parameters ? sweep angle , span bend angle , chord bend angle ?

edited :
i found that sweeping make flow takes 2 directions : normal to chord line (sweep wise component) , // to chord line (chordwise component )
i think sweep wise component used for outwash , am i wrong ?



i also found this in regulation , sweep angle will be 12 ( 200 backward ,900 )



also i wanna know if there is dihedral angle ?

User avatar
jjn9128
769
Joined: 02 May 2017, 23:53

Re: Front wing outwash flaps design

Post

ahmedshafie wrote:
22 Jan 2021, 04:32
Steven wrote:
20 Jan 2021, 12:24
What exactly are you looking for?
Did you check the regulation's boundaries?

Is your question about how aerodynamicsts define the basic shape of wings before doing iterations to improve them through small changes?
Thanks for your reply ,
sure i checked the boundries

yes im trying to know about the basic shape , i can see there are twist and bends to make outwash , but what are the basics for this design so i can reach something like this or near it .

also i want to know how y250 section is designed ? dimensions angles
You want to know how the wing profiles themselves are designed? I won't go into too much detail in case that's not what you're asking.

The Y250 is an aerodynamically "neutral" wing, probably a NACA0020 or 0022, inclined at about 4degrees nose up. The exact coordinates are at the back of the FIA regulations.
#aerogandalf
"There is one big friend. It is downforce. And once you have this it’s a big mate and it’s helping a lot." Robert Kubica

ahmedshafie
2
Joined: 20 Jan 2021, 10:18

Re: Front wing outwash flaps design

Post

jjn9128 wrote:
22 Jan 2021, 18:53
ahmedshafie wrote:
22 Jan 2021, 04:32
Steven wrote:
20 Jan 2021, 12:24
What exactly are you looking for?
Did you check the regulation's boundaries?

Is your question about how aerodynamicsts define the basic shape of wings before doing iterations to improve them through small changes?
Thanks for your reply ,
sure i checked the boundries

yes im trying to know about the basic shape , i can see there are twist and bends to make outwash , but what are the basics for this design so i can reach something like this or near it .

also i want to know how y250 section is designed ? dimensions angles
You want to know how the wing profiles themselves are designed? I won't go into too much detail in case that's not what you're asking.

The Y250 is an aerodynamically "neutral" wing, probably a NACA0020 or 0022, inclined at about 4degrees nose up. The exact coordinates are at the back of the FIA regulations.

HI Mr , thanks for your answer .

yea i want to know about profiles ,how 1 element is divided into sections ? , how they designed multi element ?

i made multi element using javafoil for trial and error then made cfd , does that what f1 teams do ?

i want also know about the guide curves , i found that one curve (top view) responsiple for outwash , the other curve (front view) responsible for up wash ,

is there dihedral angle ?

for multi element y250 , does nasa02 at angle 4 will be same angle for different elements ?

User avatar
jjn9128
769
Joined: 02 May 2017, 23:53

Re: Front wing outwash flaps design

Post

ahmedshafie wrote:
23 Jan 2021, 04:37
yea i want to know about profiles ,how 1 element is divided into sections ? , how they designed multi element ?

i made multi element using javafoil for trial and error then made cfd , does that what f1 teams do ?

i want also know about the guide curves , i found that one curve (top view) responsiple for outwash , the other curve (front view) responsible for up wash ,

is there dihedral angle ?
Okay each team will have a slightly different process (disclaimer I don't work at a team but have had conversations with people who do). If you look up aerofoil/airfoil parameterization there are a bunch of methods, but a wing profile can essentially be split into:
  • chord - how long the profile is
  • camber - how curved the profile is
  • thickness - how thick the profile is at it's widest point
  • incidence - the angle of the chordline to some fixed reference, either the car reference plane or the preceding wing profile's chordline
  • leading edge radius - how blunt/sharp the leading edge is to prevent leading edge stall
  • trailing edge thickness - how thick the finite trailing edge is (both for manufacture and CFD best practice)
  • leading edge angle - the angle the leading edge deviates from the chordline
  • trailing edge angle - the angle the trailing edge forms with the chordline
  • trailing edge fishtail - the angle formed between the pressure and suction surfaces as they re-join at the trailing edge
  • leading/trailing edge offset - the gap between the leading/trailing edge points and the chordline (but this isn't a necessary parameter).
Rather than having some mathematical model (like the NACA 4/5/6 digits) to determine all these parameters, teams will have a geometric (CAD based) method of forming the wing profiles. Those parameters will be in spreadsheet form so the wing can be generated from variables and so that some method of machine learning could be used to optimize the wing. You then define all those parameters for up to 5 wing profiles as well as defining the slot which is split into:
  • slot gap - the minimum distance between sections
  • slot overlap - the distance between the trailing edge of the lower wing and leading edge of the upper wing
for the 4 slots between profiles. The wing is then split into sections across the span, using a bare minimum of 4 planes parallel to the car centreline, where the 5 wing profiles and their respective slots are defined. The shape of the wing across the span needs to do different things, i.e. at the Y250 junction there wants to be enough load to generate a vortex but not so much load that the vortex will burst, it also wants to shed at an appropriate height that it wont clash with suspension members and break down. Equally the vortex strength wants to be insensitive to variations in ride height and rake as the car corners/accelerates/brakes. Towards the middle of the wing load wants to be maximized so the car has front grip, so you see the greatest camber and incidence here. Then towards the tip they want less load to reduce induced drag from the wing tip, so there is little camber or incidence. The tip is also raised from the bottom of the wing to further reduce vertical load.

Once that skeleton is defined a number of 3-d splines will join the section profiles together, at least 4 splines per wing element. This defines the "normals" of the wing ends, so how acutely they blend and the angle (both planform and front projected) at which they terminate - there are specific rules about the angle the wing can form with the endplate region. Finally the wing can simply be lofted from all the sections and guide curves created.

There is not any dihedral in an F1 wing, similarly the sweep is primarily an aesthetic thing, but there is a lot of twist and specific local ground clearance across the span.

Hope that helps.

ahmedshafie wrote:
23 Jan 2021, 04:37
for multi element y250 , does nasa02 at angle 4 will be same angle for different elements ?
Sorry I thought you meant the actual central, single element, section of the wing. The Y250 vortex generating bit of the wing is defined same as above.
#aerogandalf
"There is one big friend. It is downforce. And once you have this it’s a big mate and it’s helping a lot." Robert Kubica

Post Reply