A very nice video on a new cooling technology.
http://hexus.net/tech/news/cooling/4148 ... efficient/
Imagine these on your radiators or your KERS!
Huh? What you mean to say is that F1 tends to BAN new technologies. The teams themselves would embrace them. Not disagreeing with you, I just think your presentation of the facts is a bit confusing.Jersey Tom wrote:Little bit different in concept, given that the application it's developed for is effectively stagnant air, whereas radiators and oil coolers and all are designed to work off a forced air stream. Pretty cool on its own though.
In any event, keep this in mind - F1 does not embrace cutting edge or new technology. No active suspensions, no all wheel drive, no traction control, no direct injection, etc etc. Inerters only found their way in the sport after a similar concept (tuned mass damper) was outlawed earlier. Gadgets and gizmos are only added to the mix if they have the potential to make the show more interesting (or as I would say more bluntly, crutch the lack of good racing). DRS and KERS are prime examples of that.
Remember the key problem is the boundary layer on the surface of a radiator. It still exists even in an F1 car.Lycoming wrote:If you mean having all the cooling come from a flat, flush mounted plate, I suspect that would still be a bad idea today. If you mean sticking sandia coolers on top of such a surface, that somewhat defeats the purpose of minimum drag.
That cooling solution, I don't really see it as that clever of an idea... I mean, it essentially de-invents the radiator. Maybe if he had some fins on it that could have been used for flow conditioning, but that wouldn't be legal now.
It doesn't matter because the Thermal conductivity of the air bearing is still far higher than the thermal conductivity on the radiator surface. That's how they can get away with the radiator not touching the heat source.mep wrote:Pรถรถรถ, they make such a hype around what is basically a simple pump. Pumps like that have been around for centuries. I really canโt see how they can sell this now as innovative. They should rather focus on the main problem with this device: โHow to get the heat into the rotorโ. So far the rotor is isolated from the heat by this thin gab of air. No matter how thin this layer is, it will drastically reduce efficiency of the cooler because it relies on radiation from the relatively thin circular surface. The rotor on top seems to be oversized relative to that. I think the blades should be hollowed out to let allow for hot water flowing through them.