as all the cars go threw at once.
but the tunnel is not full closed on both sides, more then half of it is open to the sea
I would think that most of the aerodynamic effects would be lessened because of this

olefud wrote:If the car were moving through the tunnel it would. If you stand at a railroad tunnel exit you can feel the air being pushed by an approaching train. But the car in a wind tunnel isn’t moving so it builds static pressure ahead of it.autogyro wrote:Could the car force air ahead of it through the tunnel?
This would create turbulance at the tunnel exit.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_effect_(aircraft)while inverted might be of interest.
Yes, do a google image search for Shinkansen trains. The nose shape is all a design for this. Drag is not a concern. It's so that when two trains pass each other at well over 200mph(especially In a tunnel) they don't blow out each others windows as they pass through the pressure regions fore and aft.Tommy Cookers wrote:in Japan (I think) they now have some lines where each track has its individual tunnel, and the train is a close fit in its tunnel
the tunnel needs and has at each end a silencing structure like the silencer on a gun barrel
otherwise there is a big bang