Astonishingly strange features on a car

Astonishingly strange features on a car

Author
Discussion

youngsyr

14,742 posts

193 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
quotequote all
Doesn't add anything to the discussion, but I think it's a cool picture and it's slightly on topicish...


Mark-C

5,196 posts

206 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
quotequote all
youngsyr said:
<snip>
Maybe I just don't understand the principles involved and I'm just simplifying things then.

I'd have thought that if the lip on the M5 reduces lift by 50kgs (even at 150 mph), these canards would rip themselves off by the time the car reaches that speed? confused

[pedant]A canard is a duck or an aircraft wing .... on cars these tend to get called "dive planes" although strictly speaking the vertical element is a "gurney" which is normally used to describe any element perpendicular to the surface it's attached to that acts as a boundary to airflow.[/pedant]

Sorry and the answer is .... modern bonding techniques are very very good



Edited by Mark-C on Tuesday 9th December 23:24

carl_w

9,214 posts

259 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
quotequote all
youngsyr said:
I'd have thought that if the lip on the M5 reduces lift by 50kgs (even at 150 mph), these canards would rip themselves off by the time the car reaches that speed? confused

If you're referring to the stuff in front of the wheels, that'll be to direct the air up to the top of the wing where it can remain laminar and attached to the bodywork, rather than getting involved in the turbulent crap around the wheels. If you're referring to the vertical components of the splitter, they're there to stop the air 'falling off' the end of the splitter and creating vortices. The splitter's job is to direct as much air over the top of the car as possible, and as little (but non-zero) under the bottom to maximize the speed of the airflow under the car and hence the downforce.

youngsyr

14,742 posts

193 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
quotequote all
Mark-C said:
youngsyr said:
<snip>
Maybe I just don't understand the principles involved and I'm just simplifying things then.

I'd have thought that if the lip on the M5 reduces lift by 50kgs (even at 150 mph), these canards would rip themselves off by the time the car reaches that speed? confused
[pedant]A canard is a duck or an aircraft wing .... on cars these tend to get called "dive planes" although strictly speaking the vertical element is a "gurney" which is normally used to describe any element perpendicular to the road that acts as a boundary to horizontal airflow.[/pedant]

Sorry and the answer is .... modern bonding techniques are very very good
Modern bonding techniques??? They're bolted/rivetted on, aren't they?! confused

... and if we're being pedantic, the people that make them call them canards. wink

http://www.aprperformance.com/index.php?option=com...



Edited by youngsyr on Tuesday 9th December 23:39

sjg

7,462 posts

266 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
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RicksAlfas said:
For as long as I can remember Alfa headlights go on and off with the ignition which is a great feature until you actually want them on. Then you have to press in a tiny button on the ignition barrel with one hand and turn the key (with the other hand!) past it's usual OFF position before pulling it out. I never mastered it. Since going onto key fobs that push into the dash they have come up with a more seperate button called "P" - for parking lights. It's next to the odo reset which is clearly mounted down by your right kneecap.
biggrin
Most italian cars do. I much prefer it that way - at this time of year your headlights are permanantly on, and you don't want to have a buzzer blaring to remind you to switch them off when you'll just turn them back on next time.

youngsyr

14,742 posts

193 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
quotequote all
carl_w said:
youngsyr said:
I'd have thought that if the lip on the M5 reduces lift by 50kgs (even at 150 mph), these canards would rip themselves off by the time the car reaches that speed? confused
If you're referring to the stuff in front of the wheels, that'll be to direct the air up to the top of the wing where it can remain laminar and attached to the bodywork, rather than getting involved in the turbulent crap around the wheels. If you're referring to the vertical components of the splitter, they're there to stop the air 'falling off' the end of the splitter and creating vortices. The splitter's job is to direct as much air over the top of the car as possible, and as little (but non-zero) under the bottom to maximize the speed of the airflow under the car and hence the downforce.
I was referring to the parts in front of the wheels. So they're not to aid downforce at the front? I didn't realise that.

I still can't see how these don't generate enough downforce (reduce lift) to tear themselves off if that M5 lip can generate 50 kgs of downforce (/reduced lift)? confused



Edited by youngsyr on Tuesday 9th December 23:35

djoli101

21 posts

215 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
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passat has a few

Escape handle inside the boot.
Umbrella in door.
hold lock/unlock all the windows lower/raise.

Mark-C

5,196 posts

206 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
quotequote all
youngsyr said:
Mark-C said:
youngsyr said:
<snip>
Maybe I just don't understand the principles involved and I'm just simplifying things then.

I'd have thought that if the lip on the M5 reduces lift by 50kgs (even at 150 mph), these canards would rip themselves off by the time the car reaches that speed? confused
[pedant]A canard is a duck or an aircraft wing .... on cars these tend to get called "dive planes" although strictly speaking the vertical element is a "gurney" which is normally used to describe any element perpendicular to the road that acts as a boundary to horizontal airflow.[/pedant]

Sorry and the answer is .... modern bonding techniques are very very good
Modern bonding techniques??? They're bolted on, aren't they?! confused

... and if we're being pedantic, the people that make them call them canards. wink

http://www.aprperformance.com/index.php?option=com...
My info comes from an interest in endurance racing. Thinking about it bonding them on is crap if you want to change them so I'll let that one go (ie ... admit I'm wrong!) but will stick to "dive plane" because I've never seen them called anything else.

http://www.radicalsportscars.com/range/sr9/index.p...
http://mazda-lola.com/lemans2006/lemans2006_wednes...
http://www.mulsannescorner.com/peugeot908-4.html
http://www.americanlemans.com/drivers_and_teams/Dr...

Which probably makes me a defensive pedant

How about "winglet" ?



mat205125

17,790 posts

214 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
quotequote all
youngsyr said:
Doesn't add anything to the discussion, but I think it's a cool picture and it's slightly on topicish...

Love those wheels cloud9

youngsyr

14,742 posts

193 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
quotequote all
Mark-C said:
youngsyr said:
Mark-C said:
youngsyr said:
<snip>
Maybe I just don't understand the principles involved and I'm just simplifying things then.

I'd have thought that if the lip on the M5 reduces lift by 50kgs (even at 150 mph), these canards would rip themselves off by the time the car reaches that speed? confused
[pedant]A canard is a duck or an aircraft wing .... on cars these tend to get called "dive planes" although strictly speaking the vertical element is a "gurney" which is normally used to describe any element perpendicular to the road that acts as a boundary to horizontal airflow.[/pedant]

Sorry and the answer is .... modern bonding techniques are very very good
Modern bonding techniques??? They're bolted on, aren't they?! confused

... and if we're being pedantic, the people that make them call them canards. wink

http://www.aprperformance.com/index.php?option=com...
My info comes from an interest in endurance racing. Thinking about it bonding them on is crap if you want to change them so I'll let that one go (ie ... admit I'm wrong!) but will stick to "dive plane" because I've never seen them called anything else.

http://www.radicalsportscars.com/range/sr9/index.p...
http://mazda-lola.com/lemans2006/lemans2006_wednes...
http://www.mulsannescorner.com/peugeot908-4.html
http://www.americanlemans.com/drivers_and_teams/Dr...

Which probably makes me a defensive pedant

How about "winglet" ?
Looking at those links, I think there's a difference between a dive plane and a canard. wink

The dive plane seems to work like you say, by diverting air around the wheel:



Whereas:

"APR Front Bumper Canards are the perfect answer to aerodynamically tune the handling for the front of a car. Made of lightweight and durable carbon graphite composites, APR Front Bumper Canards help increase front downforce at high speeds. The added downforce stabilizes the cars chassis during hard cornering and increases traction for faster lap times."

You can see the air isn't diverted around the wheels by the lower canard:



Edited by youngsyr on Tuesday 9th December 23:58

tuscan_al

4,107 posts

215 months

Wednesday 10th December 2008
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garycat said:
mrmr96 said:
Another Evo one - the 7, 8 and 9 (and probably earlier ones too) have a Flare Holder built into the near side kick panel of the front passenger footwell. Yup, Flare Holder.
My import CRX had ne of those, complete with flare. I thought it was a fire extinguisher!!!
perfect anti car jacking device i would think!

Crusoe

4,068 posts

232 months

Wednesday 10th December 2008
quotequote all
Always thought the vag key in the lock lowering and opening windows was firstly so you could close a window a passenger forgot and left open but more often for lowering all the windows an inch he you were leaving pets for example in the car.

For the 50kg at 150mph consider the force on your hand area sticking it out the window at 150, the square of the force at 75mph which is already quite high. Area of the spoiler is maybe twice the surface area of your hand.

youngsyr

14,742 posts

193 months

Wednesday 10th December 2008
quotequote all
mat205125 said:
youngsyr said:
Doesn't add anything to the discussion, but I think it's a cool picture and it's slightly on topicish...
Love those wheels cloud9
My car had those wheels on before I bought it. Unfortunately they were sold separately before I could get my hands on them. crylaugh

They only cost around £2,000 a set. laugh



Edited by youngsyr on Wednesday 10th December 00:10

youngsyr

14,742 posts

193 months

Wednesday 10th December 2008
quotequote all
Crusoe said:
...
For the 50kg at 150mph consider the force on your hand area sticking it out the window at 150, the square of the force at 75mph which is already quite high. Area of the spoiler is maybe twice the surface area of your hand.
It's a good analogy, but surely it's the same as saying stack 50 kgs distributed evenly across the surface area of the lip?

If the lip can generate that much, how much are those canards/winglets ( wink ) having to deal with at the speeds the race cars travel?

Maybe it's my simple mind, but I just cannot comprehend how the two equate.


GravelBen

15,726 posts

231 months

Wednesday 10th December 2008
quotequote all
Aerodynamics isn't that simple though, and you still seem to be thinking of 50kg less lift as being the same thing as 50kg of positive downforce.

For example some of the reduction in lift may be (just speculation in this case) because the gurney is disrupting an airflow that would otherwise cause lift - ie not creating a downward force but stopping an upward force being created.

It certainly isn't as simple as just saying the gurney is pushing down 50kg which balances out 50kg of the upward force.

Fiddlemesticks

14,280 posts

217 months

Wednesday 10th December 2008
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My wifes Sorento has a Barometer. Not a friggin clue why.

Howitzer

2,836 posts

217 months

Wednesday 10th December 2008
quotequote all
On a bit of a fun drive when in europe I noticed that as speeds went above 220kmh my rear interior light came on.

This was due to the bootid striker plate not being fully tight. The force of the air coming off the roof literally started to suck the boot open.

So I can understand how even a small gurney flat at speed on the E39M5 can make such a big difference.

Dave!

LuS1fer

41,157 posts

246 months

Wednesday 10th December 2008
quotequote all
The use of the remote to drop the windows is actually very useful when you park the car in the sun and want to open all the windows to let the car cool before you reach it, open the door and get greeted by a furnace.

fathomfive

9,957 posts

191 months

Wednesday 10th December 2008
quotequote all
Frederick said:
fathomfive said:
touching cloth said:
fathomfive said:
jmorgan said:
touching cloth said:
Saab's "night panel" feature has to rank highly - I used it once when I had my Saab, thought it was silly and never pressed it again - oddly I have never found the other instruments have distracted me from driving a car and am happy to have them illuminated.
I like it.
+1 I drive to work in the pitch black of 5am at the moment and I find it very useful. Especially when you dim the panel aswell.
Clearly you are both insane and/or have Top Gun delusions ... I bet you call your passengers Ice and Goose tongue outwink
Yes, but in a Swedish accent. wink
Icesh and Goosch?
You're drunk shirley? hehe

RicksAlfas

13,424 posts

245 months

Wednesday 10th December 2008
quotequote all
LuS1fer said:
The use of the remote to drop the windows is actually very useful when you park the car in the sun and want to open all the windows to let the car cool before you reach it, open the door and get greeted by a furnace.
It's also useful in the winter for wiping them clear of condensation!
(And as mentioned previously it's useful on coupes with big doors and frameless windows if you are in a tight space).