Roof Spoiler
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Saw this on another forum. Looks like it would be worst aerodynamics.
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It's hard to tell because it all depends on how it fills out or does not fill out the aerodynamic template.
I'm guessing it's this profile below - correct me if I'm wrong. https://www.nadaguides.com/Cars/2018...0-FWD/Pictures https://cdn.jdpower.com/ChromeImageG...001_640_03.jpg Guessing where that top of rear window spoiler is, I suspect it is in the airflow and interacting with the attached airflow. Spoilers spoil the airflow, causing rolling vortexes that can pull down the layer of air above it - a good thing but it takes energy - a bad thing. I'm not a fan of this upper location because the spoiler is not at a 60 degree angle, the angle required for creating a good vortex. In effect this spoiler is not a spoiler, it is a flatish plate that allows for a clean release of air, but it's a clean release of air where attachment would normally be, so it's kind of a stupid location. The effect is a larger hole in the air than without it. Again, this needs to be verified with a template overlay - go for it Joggernot. |
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I do see room in life for keeping an open mind on this in only a very limited scope pending wind tunnel verification. 1. Historic examples from late 1970's of redirecting roof foils on BMW and Lancia Class-B type race cars with notch-back roof lines. Example https://www.scalemates.com/kits/tami...racing--128154 https://www.scalemates.com/products/...0-pristine.jpg 2. Spoilers on notch-back cars that angle down at about a 7-degree angle and give the air a clean edge to release from. I use words of caution about blind rage or blanket ridicule on any topic as it invites group think over actual analysis, and that's the sort of thing that made these idiot devices popular to begin with. One last point, none of the spoilers in the video were true +60 degree Gurney flaps that I was talking about earlier as the narrator focused on aftermarket junk. I would be very interested in seeing wind tunnel or CFD diagrams of Wickebill/Gurney flaps on roof edges if anyone finds them. |
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However some do angle up a bit at the lip similar to your addition. I think that some of these roof spoilers are small enough and flat enough as not to cause as much damage as others of more aggressive design. Meaning one is still shooting one's self, but not a head shot, just shooting one's self in the foot. |
I came across this in a textbook last winter. It seems relevant here.
https://ecomodder.com/forum/member-v...520-105825.jpg |
The word "spoiler" is applied to any trailing edge device that's been added on including those of modest negative slope and those of +60 degrees.
In that context just about every SUV and Crossover made today has one, and so do the last of the wagons and hatchbacks. Just want to point this out for clarity. https://www.hendrickhondasc.com/used...ZZMCAXGC025606 https://www.hendrickhondasc.com/inve...jpg?height=400 https://www.grandmotorcars.com/detai...7fbb98380.html https://photos5.motorcar.com/used-20...7822-9-800.jpg https://photos5.motorcar.com/used-20...7822-4-800.jpg https://www.consumerreports.org/smal...ooper-preview/ https://article.images.consumerrepor...-Cooper-r-1-18 It's just not the location at the back of the car that makes the examples above better than the ones in the video. It is their design and angle of attack. |
roof spoiler
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The Genesis is capable of in the neighborhood of 150-mph.If the car was found to be unstable at this speed,Hyundai may have added it as a palliative,as Audi did with their TT.And Daimler did with their Mercedes-Benz 190 EVO.Mitsubishi Lancer.Subaru WRX. Car companies don't want their customers killing themselves.It's bad press. You can legally drive the Genesis at top speed on portions of the Autobahn,so it would be an issue,at least in Europe. |
The person was very proud of the new after-market add on. Not an OEM piece. Yes, it was on a Hyundai Genesis, but the year wasn't given.
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ignore the fire https://ecomodder.com/forum/attachme...1&d=1559280791 |
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That para is absolute garbage. To show the 'quality' of this book, note how reference 9, cited in the para, isn't even in the chapter references... A spoiler, common in sports cars, is a negative lift device. Yes. It reduces the lift by slowing down the flow over its upper surface. What surface? Not the spoiler, as this suggests. A negative lift wing is the most common type of spoiler. No, a wing is not a spoiler - how basic a mistake can be made? When lifting devices are used, it is important to place them in the proper location at the rear of the vehicle, or they may turn out to negate the very effect for which they have been incorporated [9]. Ref 9 not included in chapter references (there are none for the book as a whole). It's highly unlikely that any spoiler will create lift on any modern car (where most lift comes from attached flow), unless something really weird is done so that the spoiler deflects air massively downwards. For example, a spoiler on the vehicle rear roof only adds to the lift. I don't think this is the case - in fact I think this is balderdash on any modern car with attached flow over the rear window. But OK, now where is the evidence for this? None is presented. The book is full of mistakes - staggering that it was published by the SAE. If you want to learn about spoilers/wings/etc, Katz, Hucho or Scheutz are the gold standard - especially when compared to this book! |
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To paraphrase C.S. Lewis, I was young then--I hadn't started any engineering coursework when I posted this, and to quote another of my teachers (John Walter Hill, longtime musicology professor at the University of Illinois), "that was back when I believed everything I read." |
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Note that no-one at the time said that the extract was obviously wrong - the confusion of wing and spoiler should have alerted even the greatest tyro. (Instead, two people 'liked' the post!) |
Findings in science are not always analogous or what they seem
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The thing is that the reference [9] , which I can't find either, may have found that their spoiler on the roof increased lift in some way, maybe by stopping a boot lip spoiler or sculpted and lift reducing body after the hatch from working properly. Quote:
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But I was referring to the confusion in the piece between a spoiler and wing - and the fact that is so wrong was a red flag re credibility. |
roof spoiler
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seems
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* One Toyota Celica Supra also had an iconic, cosmetic roof spoiler, also of no effect. * Mercedes-Benz built a 190 Evo, with a combination roof spoiler, rear wing, which was effective aerodynamically. * Today's SUV rear spoilers have been shown to affect drag.The further back they reach, along the Kamm-Back contour, the lower the drag and lift. You can see it between the Porsche Cayenne and Toyota RAV4. The Porsche is Cd 0.36, while the RAV4 is Cd 0.30, and Toyota went to great pains to extend the D-pillar extensions back, almost to the Kamm truncation line. * As MetroMPG emphasized years ago, we ought to take vehicles on a case-specific basis, and steer away from generalities. |
disrupt
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sports cars
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A MIATA Club Car would require a different solution compared to a modern Corvette coupe. |
aftermarket
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I'd bet a cup of coffee and a donut that the roof spoiler has degraded the aerodynamic efficiency and stability. |
slowing down the flow
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If the spoiler is there to provide a surface of reattachment, then it IS addressing a situation in which the low pressure over the backlight/boot region is caused by the early 'fast' flow separation. By providing for flow reattachment, a locked-vortex is established, over which the fast inviscid flow CAN decelerate, and by the time it reaches the top of the spoiler, is at a higher static pressure, plus the spoiler acting as a dam, sequestering the low pressure immediately over the boot, away from the base of the car, where it cannot effect the wake. In this case, both drag and lift are reduced do to the 'slower' air. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- As to a 'wing' not being a 'spoiler', it may be a issue of semantics. Anything that spoils lift is technically a spoiler, regardless of the actual device or technology. For example, a venturi is a 'spoiler.' ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Your comment about 'most lift comes from attached flow,' ought to include caveats, as there exists counterfactual evidence to your claim. Streamlined bodies have completely-attached flow, yet generate zero lift. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Your book contains mistakes about 'wrapped' flow and lift. ' He who sins not, cast the first stone.' |
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So a good example of Aerohead writing material that is not relevant as he seems to be talking about a boot spoiler, not the roof spoiler that's under discussion. Quote:
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It's highly unlikely that any spoiler will create lift on any modern car (where most lift comes from attached flow), unless something really weird is done so that the spoiler deflects air massively downwards. Note my specific reference to modern cars: and yes, in modern cars, where there is attached flow over the upper surfaces, most lift does in fact come from attached flow. Quote:
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...not to mention of course feedback from the tech consultant when I wrote the book, who happens to be a world-renowned aerodynamicist. None of them suggest any mistakes about 'wrapped flow' and 'lift'. And you know what, I think I'd trust their opinions over Aerohead's ideas.... |
missed the part, ........................
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* Anything that spoils lift is a 'spoiler'. Wings included. * I'm in disagreement with your broad-brush assertion that, with modern cars, that 'most lift comes from attached flow.' *It's my opinion that, caveats/ conditions need to be spelled out. * If you have an industry-wide statistical analysis which demonstrates that for the entire vehicle population, that causality of lift is directly associated with a statistically significant proportion of vehicles, only then could one make such an argument. * And just for the benefit of the reader, allow that there are exceptions to your general claim. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- * If you're only testing vehicles possessing contour-compromised roofline profiles, which violate the ' ground rules of fluid mechanics' as Hucho refers to them, all your data will suggest that presumed attached flow is responsible for lift. An inescapable intellectual cul -de -sac. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Wing sections are not streamline bodies, in the strict sense of the term. Wings operate in two-dimensional flow. As mentioned elsewhere, every wing profile has an angle-of-attack at which zero-lift is achieved. In the back of their book, Abbott and Von Doenhoff provided tables for all extant wing profiles, and the tables provide dedicated columns just for the zero-lift data. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- * 'Streamline bodies' denote 'streamline bodies of revolution', and for automotive application, ' half-bodies of revolution.' This is technical language specific to road vehicle aerodynamics. * The 'aerodynamic streamlining template' is based upon a half-body, derived from a streamline body of Cd 0.04, the drag minimum known, for a body of which the aft-body contraction contour does not exceed 22-degrees as measured off a horizontal projection. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- As I was not a witness to your communications with your team of aerodynamicists, I've no idea about the specific language chosen in your exchanges which would lead to your conclusions. Your choice of 'wrapped airflow' is a very unfortunate choice of wording, it is not a 'technical' term used in the profession, and extremely problematic with respect the reader experience. Not everyone excels at technical writing. |
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A wing is not a spoiler, and a spoiler is not a wing, in any technical automotive use of the words. I am glad Aerohead reiterates his misconception so that can be no confusion in the minds of people reading this that his mistake was just a typo. I am quite happy to stand by my point that most lift on modern cars comes from attached flow. Just look at any CFD image or wool tuft / pressure testing of any modern car shape. There are plenty around to look at! Quote:
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' such little significance'
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1)'[L]ow drag can only be achieved when the separation at the rear is eliminated.' Hucho, 2nd-Ed. page 16 ( template) 2)' [T]he optimum shape in terms of drag is a half-body, which forms a complete body of revolution together with its mirror image- produced through reflection from the roadway.' ( template) Hucho, page 15. 3) ' [T]he value of Cd 0.15 can be realized with more than one single body shape.' Hucho pg 201 4) ' Lower drag can only be achieved by extending the length of the vehicle's body.' Hucho pg 201 5) ' The drag coefficient for...passenger cars may be plotted against vehicle length.[I]f the evaluation is limited to vehicles that were developed for the lowest possible drag coefficient ( template ),( the correlation discerned between greater lengths and lower drag ) this expected trend in in fact confirmed.' Hucho pg 202 6)' A closer approach to the value of the basic body without wheels ( Cd 0.07 - Cd 0.09 ) is only achievable through further integration of the wheels into the body.' ( template ) Hucho, page 201 7) ' The drag and lift of a body depend strongly upon the angle of attack.' Hucho, pg 202, Re Stollery & Burns, Ref. 4.82 ( bodies of revolution / template) 8) ' It is very unfortunate that numerous ( lift ) investigations on basic bodies are inconsistent.' Hucho, pg 205 ( bodies of revolution ) 9) ' A more systematic investigation is needed to generate the basic knowledge on the aerodynamics of bluff bodies close to the ground.' Hucho, pg 206 ( bodies of revolution / template ) |
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