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#1
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Did I hear thunder?
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I'ts raining cats and dogs right now and I guarantee the H2O would fill up like a jet in a jacuzzi w/ an intake underneath...EVEN with some kinda trap on it. |
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#2
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put a flap to release the water on days it is raining
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#3
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thelazerviking Research and Design team presents...
![]() ![]() tada. no fancy spoilers venturis diffusers wahtever the hell. instead of your fenders being restrictive they can be used for downforce. ....and a duct to cool the brakes off and help air flow can also be incorporated into the green area. you can reverse the whole thing for the back of the front fender to create better airflow and vent out that fender too indstead of those louver ideas and junk tghat probably won't work so well stop trying so hard. |
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#4
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Lazer..
Where in NJ are you.. it is great to know that there is someone else from NJ.. Alex
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78 Vert, In pieces and on hold also a 73 Saloon, currently being built.. |
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#5
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something I was thinking of doing is shown in the pics below. I know the pics are from a 911 rsr, but the basic idea is the same. In order to take things to the next level I would like to have an inner fender, as the cars have positioned in front of the wheel (looking the car from below). This would minimize air turbulance above the fake bottom in front of wheel
Any comments are welcome Chris
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Aircooled 4ever 1973 1303 going towards GL |
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#6
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Quote:
Chris
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Aircooled 4ever 1973 1303 going towards GL |
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#7
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the bug is like a giant airfoil, especially with it's flat bottom. put a front spoiler on it and lower the car then instead of high pressure under the car it should be a lower pressure. i think the reason the rear end feels so light at high speeds is because of how rounded out the back end it, there's probably a very great area of low pressure there, pulling the rear end up. if the front is lower than the rear that should help keep the rear end down too because it creates low pressure in the rear of the car, that's basically what a spoiler does though. check out how airplane winds work with airfoils.
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#8
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this reminds me of something i was working on in Japan.
http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~ge8w-ngk.../mente272.html Its in japanese, but you can see the schematics which is all you really need. No, that wasnt my car, but i was trying to make it work on mine |
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#9
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HotRod Magazine just did an article on this subject. Some simple things to do are the front air dam, Lower the front of the car sightly more than the rear (accelerates the air under the car), Add side skirts to prevent air from entering the bottom from the sides and Spoil the air off the back of the car. Spoiling the air actually accomplishes two things. It decreases lift especialy with the shape of the beetle and also reduces drag by eliminating the low pressure at the back of the car.
Now on a completely different line of thought, has anyone here ever seen the Chaparral 2J? It was nick named the "sucker car" and had two fans mounted on the back of the car to literally suck the air from under the car. If you are running an air cooled engine you could draw some of the air from under the car (like some of you do) and this actually helps! Here's a link that shows the two snowmobile engine driven fans on the 2J car. http://www.petroleummuseum.org/Chaparral/Tour4Indy.html I doubt that this will help us much but it was really cool to see. Jim Hall was a pioneer in Ground effects and dominated road racing. He won indy his first year (Johnny Rutherford driving) by channeling the air under the car to create down force. Last edited by PJL54Oval; November 27th 2005 at 12:02. |
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