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Radiator hood vent?? Aero, cooling, WAI, all in one??
Off and on lurker as I research my crazy ideas... I hope this is the best section for this, if not hopefully an admin or mod can move it to the appropriate section.
In many high end vehicles you see hood vents at about the break over point of the hood, I'm assuming this is the start of the pressure zone in regards to air flow (see image 1). And in some extreme race cars and high speed vehicles this is actually the exhaust/exit for all air allowed through the front of the car for the cooling system. It is a sealed "chute" or tunnel from the air dam/bumper through the rad/intercooler/etc and then out the hood (see image 2). It's almost always used in hill climb and time attack cars to maximize cooling with the super high powered and boosted engines. Couldn't this be easily adapted for ecomodding to utilize a front air dam (or blocking of all other openings in bumper) and maintain cooling (see image 3 & 4)? Wouldn't this allow for better control of front aero/resistance by channeling the incoming air and removing engine bay resistance (possibly combined with belly pan), engine temps would be kept low in the face of overly hot engine compartment temps, and create a warm air environment suitable for removal of filter box and modification to cone filter, removing the need to fabricate a WAI? I'm not sure if I'm truly explaining myself, but I hope that made sense. Images 5-10 are of builds done on various cars and engine configurations. The AMS build changes the orientation of the rad, the second Mitsu build maintains stock orientation. I feel like the design for the mitsu could be modified for most Fwd engine compartments. I hope it's ok that I linked to other sites/forums, I'm not affiliated with any of them... Just wanted to give appropriate credit to someone else's work. I look forward to hearing from some of you ecomodding and aero experts!!! ~C 1.) http://i.imgur.com/vwNACBBl.jpg 2.) http://i.imgur.com/Pf9Qro1l.jpg Following images found here Radiator Hood Vent - Miata Turbo Forum - Turbo Kitten is watching you test compression. 3.) http://i.imgur.com/JLMW4vxl.jpg 4.) http://i.imgur.com/967uRFkl.jpg Following images from here The AMS Unlimited AWD TA EVO X build! - - Page 3 - Time Attack Forums 5.) http://i.imgur.com/w81LDeVl.jpg 6.) http://i.imgur.com/Oj7qZtzl.jpg 7.) http://i.imgur.com/uQtCH36l.jpg following pictures from My ducted radiator setup - road racing | Page 4 | DSMtuners 8.) http://i.imgur.com/M0oTchgl.jpg 9.) http://i.imgur.com/0hqpSjel.jpg 10.) http://i.imgur.com/QrFP8Qkl.jpg |
Interesting.... I assumed you were going to mention the reverse cowl hood like you see on many v8 powered vehicles or the hood vent like you see on a hummer. I think in the hummer the radiator maybe horizontal vs vertical so if someone takes a shot at the grill it wont suffer an instant water leak.
http://img.tapatalk.com/d/12/09/03/umejenuz.jpg https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/i...DVLgYzEkENLI6w |
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It was my understanding that cowl *induction* hoods are for sucking in cooler air that forms a high pressure pocket at the windshield and not for actual ventilation of the engine compartment? This would seem to be counter productive from a W.A.I. as well as an aerodynamics standpoint. That being said, I like cowl hoods, and perhaps you would adapt a cowl type structure to better control the flow of exiting air and deal with rainwater/foreign objects falling down the hood chute. Rather than a cowl for venting/inducting cooler air to the bay, the cowl would just be the exit of the radiator air flow. Hadn't considered the idea of a minor fender bender instantly cracking you radiator or worse... I suppose one could incorporate a crumple zone into the lower chute? Maybe use thin ABS plastic that will flex with some sort of fabric wrap to keep air from leaking at the seams? ~C |
I would paraphrase your question as 'do best practices in the race car field apply to ecomodding?' Close enough?
Your question could use some more context (like you pic #1). Ecomodding extends from someone looking for pay-back within x000miles, to some one building their own reverse tricycle. Here's you theoretical ideal: http://ecomodder.com/forum/member-fr...1215138521.jpg The size of the ducting package isn't trivial. Also, immersing the engine itself in turbulent moving air has to provide some degree of engine cooling; sealing it in a close compartment should throw more load onto the water cooling subsystem. Consider the warm air intake. One has to admit sufficient air to supply the intake. So the radiator and induction have to be outside the sealed compartment. There are other threads that suggest the bottomside or wheelwell as the best place to dump the radiatored air. |
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Paraphrase would be "can one utilize these particular ideas to accomplish multiple goals in a more efficient and safe fashion than one can with more common ecomods?" When one blocks airflow in the front of the car, a common ecomod, you risk dangerous engine temps due to lack of airflow to both ventilate the engine compartment and to optimize the cooling system. I have seen this discussed many times on this site. Utilizing radiator ducting, one can do this in a manner which still allows one to maintain lower engine temps (I would assume). As long as the radiator wasn't confined and you didn't delete your fan, it should maintain in stop and go traffic as well shouldn't it? This would also give you a greater ability to block and smooth more of your bumper/airdam. Quote:
Pic#1 is of common ventilation points on many higher end cars. It falls just behind the nose of the hood where frontal impact begins to dissipate. If you drive in the winter, it's the point where road grime begins to give way to a clean hood. examples of the "line" or "break over" point I'm referring to: Between the dark blue and the green on the hood, this is the area I was pointing out. http://i.imgur.com/yJcsGJ4l.jpg Most modern day factory hood vents are at this point, just as they are in pic #1 from my original post. That was the hood of a BMW. http://i.imgur.com/1pqIYNgl.jpg Quote:
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Lets look at this again: http://i.imgur.com/yJcsGJ4l.jpg The green areas in front of the bumper and the lower windshield... Couldn't one, via radiator ducting and hood vent, make those areas into higher flow areas? Wouldn't this decrease wind resistance and increase airflow in the two biggest spots of resistance? This would in effect, decrease frontal load on the vehicle would it not? Allowing the air to flow straight through, and then pop out of the hood at an angle which could assist the air in flowing over the windshield. I'm just thinking out-loud at this point though. This wasn't the original intent behind my post :eek::D ~C |
1) COLD air is DENSER than HOT air.
2) HOT (less dense) air from radiator will RISE. 3) HOT (less dense) air has lower viscosity and thus clings LESS to surfaces. HINT -- view a radiator as being a low-temperature example of a ram-jet engine: cold air IN & hot air OUT = THRUST. |
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My mention of pic#1 was distracting; I meant what range of vehicles are you considering. I assume front-engined and water cooled.
http://ecomodder.com/forum/member-fr...gt-one-tm1.jpg http://www.bombaydigital.com/boxster...s/overview.gif Here are some mid- and rear-engined examples that might be instructive. Under the skin the structure of the Toyota racer is remarkable similart to a long A-arm off-road racer. F1 cars also use a high pointed nose tip, overhanging their front wing. The Porsche Boxter uses two radiators in front of the wheels. They also cheat the duct length-equals-radiator-height rule of thumb with deep pockets for wind tunnel hours. Old Tele man is probably thinking of the P-51 Mustang that got measurable thrust from the cooling sustem. Meredith effect - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Quote:
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This is what the P51D Mustang combined oil/air-intercooler assembly really looked like: http://static.rcgroups.net/forums/at...st_diagram.jpg ...and this was the NACA analyses for the combined air flow: http://www.ch601.org/resources/cooling/DuctDesign.GIF |
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