I was just thrown for a loop last night after watching this.
Will dimpling a car, much like a golf ball, make it travel better through the air?
All that I know of aerodynamics would tell me no. It will grossly increase drag. This is why every surface of a car built for racing is smooth right? I even thought that the matte finish on the Army NASCAR a year or two back was at a disadvantage.
These guys took it over the top though. They tested in a water tank and decided to go to full scale testing after they got better aqua dynamic results with the dimpled car.
Before the video, they tested the car's gas mileage without clay, then put nearly 900 pounds of clay on and tested again. The video pics up after they make dimples in the surface of the car and he's putting all the excess clay from the dimples back into the car to keep the weight consistent.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWWe8j3-Vs4&NR=1
I want some thoughts from others. I don't think something like this could be even remotely usable in sports like F1 with all the winglets guiding the air, but could this create some of the ugliest race cars we've ever seen in NASCAR, or GT racing?
Will dimpling a car, much like a golf ball, make it travel better through the air?
All that I know of aerodynamics would tell me no. It will grossly increase drag. This is why every surface of a car built for racing is smooth right? I even thought that the matte finish on the Army NASCAR a year or two back was at a disadvantage.
These guys took it over the top though. They tested in a water tank and decided to go to full scale testing after they got better aqua dynamic results with the dimpled car.
Before the video, they tested the car's gas mileage without clay, then put nearly 900 pounds of clay on and tested again. The video pics up after they make dimples in the surface of the car and he's putting all the excess clay from the dimples back into the car to keep the weight consistent.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWWe8j3-Vs4&NR=1
I want some thoughts from others. I don't think something like this could be even remotely usable in sports like F1 with all the winglets guiding the air, but could this create some of the ugliest race cars we've ever seen in NASCAR, or GT racing?