ringo wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 22:09
No it is not minimal.
A lot his happening under the car outside of basic flow equations, with energy of the flow, density, pressure etc.
A density change happens very easily. Remember with the F-1 car the body of the car is working the air.
The car is squashing the air head on underneath it. You will have density changes quite easily far away from anything supersonic.
Whoah there. Please inform yourself. The air can be treated as incompressible up to around 0.3 Ma (speed of sound varies with temperature, but for standard atmosphere calculations (15*C) 0.3 Ma is around 360 kph).
However, given that's an upper limit of F1 car and to have the most presice results, I'd assume teams include the energy equations in their simulations, but from our perspective it's not necessary.
https://www.cradle-cfd.com/media/column/a149
ringo wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 22:09
The car rams the air through that section between the vane and the body, then the air expands and density will drop in this case as the molecules open out into the bigger volume.
When the air expands it slows down, but the molecules don't have more space to move around. What they have is more freedom of movement. When they are crammed in a tight space, they are being pushed from behind and so their movement is restricted to a narrower band of vectors (if they try to move backwards they quickly bounce off of the molecules behind. In a forward direction they have a more unobstructed travel (they're less likely to bounce off of other molecules), so that their average velocity increases in that direction).
When the walls expand, the molecules are more likely to travel in different directions (up, down, back), as they aren't being pushed from behind so much, and so their average velocity decreases.
hsg wrote: ↑28 Apr 2025, 08:28
What is optimal volume ratio intake/throat/diffuser and floor/diffuser?
There are optimal slope angles of the intake/diffuser, but the volume ratio depends on desired drop in pressure.
hsg wrote: ↑27 Apr 2025, 15:09
1. How such a small intake can feed all floor with air?
2. Air move from small volume(intake) to huge floor volume, so air must decelerate by Bernulli, so how this works, how this accelerate flow if we increase volume?
I'm going to disregard vortices, which greatly influence the flow, as I have no idea about them.
But is the cross sectional area at inlet actually smaller than behind? Note, that the roof at the inlet is much higher than dowstream.