

Yeah, it's to help avoid flips, if I'm not mistaken.zonk wrote:The sharkfin in LMP is mandatory
If you read my 2 previous posts again, this time carefully, you'll see how useless this last post of your's waswesley123 wrote:1. There isnt any wing support, it is piping for the DDRS(or w/e it is called) which stalls the center of the wing.
2. They cannot place a support like that on the wing as it would fall in the forbidden area.
Please explain because I dont notice it.Artur Craft wrote:If you read my 2 previous posts again, this time carefully, you'll see how useless this last post of your's waswesley123 wrote:1. There isnt any wing support, it is piping for the DDRS(or w/e it is called) which stalls the center of the wing.
2. They cannot place a support like that on the wing as it would fall in the forbidden area.
I believe that's kind of the idea with the DRD - it will primarily be used at circuits where the benefit of the reduced drag from the DRD at higher speeds outweighs the loss of downforce at medium speeds. In fact, because the DRD has more effect at or above certain speeds (depending on how it is tuned), the teams can run more rear wing to regain that downforce in the medium-speed corners without suffering as much of a penalty on the fast straights.Artur Craft wrote:what is curious about the DRD is that they put quite a big piece of bodywork(in this case the pipe) in the low pressure zone(in a car's wing, it's the bottom)
In Airplanes, they avoid putting anything over the wing because that can easily interfere in the amount of lift generated. The Le Mans Prototype teams do the same thing and even put the support in the upper side of the wing in order to leave the low pressure zone clean of any object:
Later I'll see if I can find, through CFD, roughly how much downforce is lost due to that pipe being there
really? captain ultra obviousArtur Craft wrote:If you read my 2 previous posts again, this time carefully, you'll see how useless this last post of your's waswesley123 wrote:1. There isnt any wing support, it is piping for the DDRS(or w/e it is called) which stalls the center of the wing.
2. They cannot place a support like that on the wing as it would fall in the forbidden area.
I NEVER said it to be a wing support, I always made it very clear that it was a pipe of the DRDArtur Craft wrote:what is curious about the DRD is that they put quite a big piece of bodywork(in this case the pipe) in the low pressure zone(in a car's wing, it's the bottom)
Because the jet isn't physically connected to the underside of the wing and the razor-thin boundary layer flow can pass cleanly through the gap, it shouldn't be an issue. (I think.)Artur Craft wrote:[...]
The point was just that bodywork in low pressure zones of wings are not the optimal thing.
That's what I would guess too, but that is not the point I was making.bhallg2k wrote:Because the jet isn't physically connected to the underside of the wing and the razor-thin boundary layer flow can pass cleanly through the gap, it shouldn't be an issue. (I think.)Artur Craft wrote:[...]
The point was just that bodywork in low pressure zones of wings are not the optimal thing.