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Partial Boattail/Kammback on a sedan?
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I know there have been myriads of threads related to kammbacks and boattails for hatchbacks, but how about sedans? Could a partial boattail or kammback be implemented on a sedan as well, and would it have the same FE benefit? I'm considering doing a kammback on my Civic sedan and was wondering about the following templates (color code interpretations below the images):
http://ecomodder.com/forum/attachmen...1&d=1521387812 The white indicates the kammback and the black indicates a possible partial boattail. http://ecomodder.com/forum/attachmen...1&d=1521387812 The blue and green indicate the pieces for the kammback, and the purple and red indicate the pieces for the lower part of the partial boattail. Any thoughts on this? Location, possible FE gains, durability (coroplast w/ zipties, tape, and clamps)? I know it would be better if the sides extended to the outside, but this would require taping to the exterior paint, and I'd rather not risk the car's paint job. I might have to relocate the license plate as well so it remains visible. Any tips/suggestions welcome! Or if it's just a bad idea just let me know! :thumbup: |
You don't need to worry about damaging paint with tape; I've still got tape residue from the Gorilla tape I used to attach a temporary tail last fall, but it will come right off with Goo Gone.
If you look at LSR Civics, they all have some sort of decklid extension with fences. http://image.superstreetonline.com/f..._rear_view.jpg http://image.superstreetonline.com/f...rett_civic.jpg These are built to be low-drag first, not low-lift, so they're generally a pretty good example to follow. |
Your search term within Ecomodder could be 'hitch mount'. Most of the implementations of your proposal fail in the same way yours would. (sorry). If you envision the airflow over the aft of the vehicle you would see vortexes erupting from the point of separation triggered by things like longitudinal edges and trim. This creates a wake bubble that will completely enclose the construction you propose. The most you get is wake filling.
The way you could make that work (and it would) would be to remove the roof completely and extend it out to the sides with a taped or molded transition. The taillights and license must change to accommodate the airflow. http://ecomodder.com/forum/member-fr...studebaker.jpg The reason Bonneville spoilers work it that they provide a surface for the turbulence streaming off the roofline to reattach. If you push the Kammback/boat tail concept to it's conclusion you get something like the Citroen Tubik: http://ecomodder.com/forum/member-fr...n-tubik-21.jpg |
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The closest I could find at New Car Prices and Used Car Book Values - NADAguides is a '98 in my ZIP area. Mid book is $3575 and the high-low spread is small. What value do you hope to preserve?
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For certain values of 'modifying the car' — YES. You're trying to modify the preformance envelope without modifying the engineering. However if you allow removing the trunk lid, tail lights and back bumper and storing them in a clean, dry place then the story changes... Bolt the outer corners of the box cavity to the sockets for the tail light housings and run flying buttresses to the roof, like a Ford GT40. And what XKCD/37 would call a big *ss-diffuser: https://scontent.cdninstagram.com/t5...Mjg0NA%3D%3D.2 https://scontent.cdninstagram.com/t5...Mjg0NA%3D%3D.2 |
Check out the forum's aerodynamic streamlining template, at the top of the page under "Tools". I plugged your car in and came up with this:
https://i.imgur.com/8KE6oJx.png While not strictly 100% true, anything below that black line is in the car's "wind shadow" and isn't going to help maintain laminar airflow. Marked in red is the shape of a kamm that would help lower CD: https://i.imgur.com/afCVJ9j.png EDIT: For comparison, here is how my Insight follows the template: https://i.imgur.com/2YI1xUJ.jpg |
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And then again later on I may decide my car looks too ugly and want to restore it to stock. Quote:
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Fit and finish. If it has obvious utility, to even a fraction of the public, and you can post performance information in the driver's side quarter window, why wouldn't the resale value go up over one otherwise equivalent?
http://ecomodder.com/forum/member-fr...1-100-0866.jpg This is Polymetal. It is most famous for being the cladding on the Grenfell Towers [inferno], but it is available in every town in America for signage. These samples were formed by hand with an 18" lever arm. It costs ~50% more than plywood, but is equivalent in stiffness to 5/8" plywood, and most importantly —it's prefinshed. It's all down to using very clean rollers for that street/show level of finish. And that red area is definitional http://ecomodder.com/forum/member-fr...ni-desktop.jpg You can scallop the back edge to be up-to-date. |
I would honestly do it if I could figure out a way to actually do it without spending 100s of $$ in parts. I'd want to do it in some kind of clear plastic or something so visibility out the rear wouldn't be impacted, and that in itself would already dramatically increase the cost over the coroplast I'll be using in my mods here soon. And then again I can't really think of a way to mount it securely without drilling, since I doubt clamping/zip-tying it to the hinges/edges of the trunk lid is anywhere near secure enough.
I really should take all these planned mods one bite at a time instead of trying to do everything at once lol. |
Somewhere near you vicinity there will be a recycler. At the very least Habitat for Humanity. In Bleugene Oregon it's BRING.
I've obtained a variety of materials there, Coroplast, double-wall greenhouse glazing, 1/8" ABS triangle cutoffs, sheet metal flashing, & etc. Your mileage may vary, but it would be less than full sheets for minimal cost. For a three-sided Kammback hood, I'd budget $50. Sit in the driver seat and watch in your mirror while someone moves a shop rag or something around and note where the blind spots are. Then you can see what needs to be clear. ....or cut away. The transition onto any addition will be in the blind spot on the C-pillar. It's good to have a plan. I try not to rush things too, eventual success counts. |
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