RE: McMurty Automotive targets Goodwood hill record

RE: McMurty Automotive targets Goodwood hill record

Author
Discussion

garypotter

1,537 posts

151 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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It looks like i am on my own, i dont like the look of it, it can do the hill in 20 sec but not for me as its still an EV, all that its British et al i hope they enjoy themselves but im oot.

samoht

5,782 posts

147 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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article said:
The McMurty uses a fan to dramatically increase downforce; 2,000kg is claimed, and that’s from 0mph. Don’t ask us how that’s possible, because we don’t know.
Ever run a vacuum cleaner over a loose rug, and have the rug get stuck to the nozzle? Same thing - regardless of forward speed, the fan is running and removing air from under the car, causing a partial vacuum. The thin air under the car applies less upwards pressure on its floor than the normal air above it, the net difference in force is your downforce.

Alternatively, imagine a stationary hovercraft rising up before moving off, and just imagine the fan in reverse, sucking it onto the ground and thus applying downforce rather than lift.

anonymous-user

55 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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MG7 said:
It's clearly called McMurtry
It really is. Well done PH.

Instead it sounds like it's come from a family that will tarmac your drive and rob your garage.

romac

602 posts

147 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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Looks interesting!

Best of luck for the record. I'd love to see them get it. And remember, Max may have come in for some stick in F1, but he is still in the top ten of consecutive finishes.

And PH, Please correct the name.

Edited by romac on Thursday 16th June 15:26

samoht

5,782 posts

147 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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I'm excited about the Speirling because it's a serious attempt to create an electric supercar which is small, light and efficient, rather than big heavy and powerful. It feels like a much more promising avenue to creating something actually fun. As such the Goodwood hill attempt, while interesting, doesn't exactly represent what I find most interesting with it.



Mr_Sukebe said:
IIRC, the old F1 ground effect cars worked because they had a skirt to create a very rough “seal” to assist with maintaining a lower pressure area. That was fine until you rode over a large enough bump to lift the skirt clear of the road. As Goodwood is not exactly that wide, it’s going to need some serious skill to be smooth (aswell as balls of titanium). Good luck!
The McMurtry uses a relatively small suction area in the centre of the car (I'm imagining around 1m by 1m or smaller) over which to generate downforce, so the skirted length is quite a lot smaller than the old ground effect F1 cars. Apparently the loss of downforce in a bump situation is relatively progressive (according to the people behind it), so you lose time, but it's not an instant one-way trip to the barriers.

edoverheels

358 posts

106 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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Saw it at FoS last year at their stand. Fantastic concept and tiny - about the most interesting thing there. Very interesting to see it running fast this year.

samoht

5,782 posts

147 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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The guy behind the McMurtry had an extended conversation on the Car Chat podcast not long ago, I found it really interesting and it gives a lot more technical insight into how it works and what they're hoping to achieve
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/136-thomas-y...


The Hypno-Toad

12,322 posts

206 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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jimmytheone said:
I think that looks sensational, record or not.

It looks FUN but i wonder what happens if/ when all that downforce drops off - bumps, kerbs, etc - its going to be a big off!
It’s a pleasing thing to see because unlike some of these other ‘start ups’ it’s different and the concept is pretty unique.

However when it goes up the hill, no offence to the company but I’m taking a long step back from the hay bales!!!

bobo79

296 posts

150 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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kalniel said:
Did the Mclaren F1 never enter?
The GTR didn't have fan assisted ground effect as it would have been ilegal under GT racing regs of the time (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McLaren_F1_LM).

However, the despite what the article (and folklore) says, the Brabham BT48B did actually compete at an event other than the 1978 Swedish Grand Prix - the Gunnar Nilsson Memorial Trophy in June 1979. The event was run as a time trial over one lap (without the Melbourne loop) and Piquet came fourth out of five cars. This was also James Hunt's last competitive outing in an F1 car.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunnar_Nilsson_Memor...

Edited by bobo79 on Thursday 16th June 16:46

NDNDNDND

2,035 posts

184 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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Good luck to them - I think it's a terrific thing.

It's certainly the only remotely interesting electric car out there.

nismo48

3,802 posts

208 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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thumbup

NDNDNDND said:
Good luck to them - I think it's a terrific thing.

It's certainly the only remotely interesting electric car out there.

jakeb

281 posts

195 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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I would still like to see what the 919 EVO could have done up the hill (whether faster than this or the VW or not)

Sandpit Steve

10,247 posts

75 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
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Good luck to them - but Goodwood, please let the 919 and modern F1 cars go up the hill against the clock too.

Simoncelli58

79 posts

65 months

Friday 17th June 2022
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Very interesting car and I hope they get the record .

The main thing I thought after seeing it was how good the future for the UK kit car/ small production companies could be . Obviously not as extreme but from a packaging aspect .

Its a dying industry (see Westfield this week) but with clever use of used production motors and batteries , a small 100 mile range , fairly light car could sell really well I would hope . Maybe even self building could return .

Matt Bird

1,454 posts

206 months

PH Reportery Lad

Friday 17th June 2022
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Sorry for the spelling mistake, folks - amateur hour yesterday!

Should be McMurtry and not McMurty. Won't make that mistake again!

big_rob_sydney

3,412 posts

195 months

Friday 17th June 2022
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Maybe it's just me, but this reminds me of an MX5 version of an EV. Small, light, and chuckable. I would have thought the dinosaurs here would approve, but alas, only knuckle dragging cars seem eligible.

I, for one, am curious to see how it goes, and hope it does very well. I would have thought you guys would also want to support a home grown product, instead of allowing foreign competitors to come and take your lunch money in every industry?

Midgster

573 posts

235 months

Friday 17th June 2022
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samoht said:
article said:
The McMurty uses a fan to dramatically increase downforce; 2,000kg is claimed, and that’s from 0mph. Don’t ask us how that’s possible, because we don’t know.
Ever run a vacuum cleaner over a loose rug, and have the rug get stuck to the nozzle? Same thing - regardless of forward speed, the fan is running and removing air from under the car, causing a partial vacuum. The thin air under the car applies less upwards pressure on its floor than the normal air above it, the net difference in force is your downforce.

Alternatively, imagine a stationary hovercraft rising up before moving off, and just imagine the fan in reverse, sucking it onto the ground and thus applying downforce rather than lift.
I'm sure he didn't mean it literally that he doesn't know how ground effects works, more to the point 2000kg of downforce at 0mph...so basically the fan itself is sucking the car down to the road with 2000kg of force......that's some fan!!!

samoht

5,782 posts

147 months

Friday 17th June 2022
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Midgster said:
I'm sure he didn't mean it literally that he doesn't know how ground effects works, more to the point 2000kg of downforce at 0mph...so basically the fan itself is sucking the car down to the road with 2000kg of force......that's some fan!!!
A complete vacuum over a one metre square suction area would yield a downforce of 10 tonnes, so 2 tonnes 'only' requires lowering the pressure by 20% from normal.

ch37

10,642 posts

222 months

Friday 17th June 2022
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Alex Summers is advising Max on his hill runs, they aren't messing about!

Would love to see it smash the record, from what I've heard it would even be able to give it a pretty good shot if it's wet, which is insane.

julian64

14,317 posts

255 months

Friday 17th June 2022
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what I want to see is someone prove that the car has more downforce than its weight.

Seeing a car drive upside straight for a short period would certainly prove it to doubters like me.

Till then I take comments liek this with a pinch of salt.