andy2503
New member
- Dec 20, 2004
- 1
Hi there,
Is there anybody out there who can give me some very basic aerodynamic advice on a racing car?
I have a sports racing car which is unusual in that it does not have the all enveloping bodywork normally associated with sportscars, but instead has been built with a needle-nose front end and push-rod front suspension. However, the rear end bodywork is as wide as the wheels.
The first diagram at shows the basic layout, with front (A) and rear (B) sidepods down each side attached to the main chassis. The front sidepods house the radiators, but these could be moved.
My main question is this:
The needle-nose layout is supposed to take advantage of having a low frontal area. However, because the front sidepods (A) are immediately after the front wheels, I feel this configuration is not taking full advantage of that benefit. When the air goes between the wheels and the nose, it immediately hits the sidepods, some goes through the sidepod for cooling, and some will get pushed around the sidepod. I think this is inefficient.
I am thinking of removing the front sidepods altogether, moving the radiators to the rear sidepods, and fitting some form of barge-board to deflect some of the air around the rear sidepods, as shown in the second diagram at
However, this is quite a large amount of work.
Before I embark on such a drastic change, can anyone tell me whether this change in the car will produce:
1. no benefit whatsoever,
2. only a slight benefit and possibly not worth the effort.
3. a significant benefit that would make it worthwhile.
Note: this car is a low powered car (70-80bhp), low weight (<400kg), and average race lap speeds are about 80mph.
Any advice would be gladly welcome.
Thanks in advance.
Andy Spencer
Is there anybody out there who can give me some very basic aerodynamic advice on a racing car?
I have a sports racing car which is unusual in that it does not have the all enveloping bodywork normally associated with sportscars, but instead has been built with a needle-nose front end and push-rod front suspension. However, the rear end bodywork is as wide as the wheels.
The first diagram at shows the basic layout, with front (A) and rear (B) sidepods down each side attached to the main chassis. The front sidepods house the radiators, but these could be moved.
My main question is this:
The needle-nose layout is supposed to take advantage of having a low frontal area. However, because the front sidepods (A) are immediately after the front wheels, I feel this configuration is not taking full advantage of that benefit. When the air goes between the wheels and the nose, it immediately hits the sidepods, some goes through the sidepod for cooling, and some will get pushed around the sidepod. I think this is inefficient.
I am thinking of removing the front sidepods altogether, moving the radiators to the rear sidepods, and fitting some form of barge-board to deflect some of the air around the rear sidepods, as shown in the second diagram at
However, this is quite a large amount of work.
Before I embark on such a drastic change, can anyone tell me whether this change in the car will produce:
1. no benefit whatsoever,
2. only a slight benefit and possibly not worth the effort.
3. a significant benefit that would make it worthwhile.
Note: this car is a low powered car (70-80bhp), low weight (<400kg), and average race lap speeds are about 80mph.
Any advice would be gladly welcome.
Thanks in advance.
Andy Spencer