The way I calculated the effect of DRS was to take a simulation of a 2011 F1 car (complete with 18,000rpm rev limit), and set it accelerating from 100mph along a typical f1 circuit main straight. I then use the widely touted observation that DRS is worth 15kph at the end of the straight to manually drop the drag coefficient until that 15kph differential is achieved. Its an "educated guess" at the end of the day -no cfd or anything... but I think this method is more accurate than cfd because I've made the simulation match the real world observation. It points to DRS being worth a 10 to 15% reduction in total car drag....alelanza wrote:Question, on your sim how much overall power loss are you estimating at 16k and how much drag loss from the open DRS?
At 16k the power curve that I am using (remember its an educated guess!) is down to about 715bp (I've assumed peak of 750bhp).. Its not a straight line though since I've assumed a falling torque curve.
The thing to remember is that the DRS doesn't balance the performance at all road speeds -it doesn't add much performance at the lower speeds but adds a lot at the higher speeds... the result over a whole lap is the same lap time compared to a 16000rpm limited car (on the track I've used), but over one straight the advantage could be in favour of one or other configuration depending on the length of the straight and the start/end speeds....